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Jul 18, 2017  How to speed up your Windows 10 Mobile. Interop unlock your phone to gain the ability to edit registry, (follow above steps). Edit the registry using the app. Jul 20, 2011  40 Best Windows 7 and 8 Registry Tweaks. If you want to lower your latency click on the link headline and follow the instructions how to apply the registry tweak to Windows 7. Download: Click on headline 4. To learn more. Increase the number of maximum connections in Windows 7, which can speed up your internet connection.

Tech Paul’s Fix for When Clock, Volume, Battery Power or Network Icons are Missing and/or Grayed Out in Windows Vista Sometimes, unexpected (and unwanted) changes can happen to our computers that we geeks call ‘glitches’. You install some new program, and some other program you have stops working, for example. Or you uninstall a CD burning program, and find your DVD-RW is now missing. The wonderful world of PC’s! As a tech, solving ‘glitches’ is my game (it’s what I do), and over the years I have seen a few. One such ‘glitch’ I used to see occasionally in XP, and fairly routinely in Vista, is the “missing volume control” (or “network connection”) which is a handy way to control your sound level.

Today, I will tell you t he fix that not only restores the missing icon, but keeps it there. Better still — I won’t have you mucking around in the Registry.

Simple ones first Fix It #1) Press Ctrl+D to bookmark this page and Reboot. Make sure this isn’t a “temp glitch”. 9 times outer 10 restarting your computer solves your ‘glitch’.

If you already tried that, keep reading. Fix It #2) Normally you can re-enable the icons by right-clicking on the Taskbar, choosing Properties and going to the Notification Area tab — place checks in the checkboxes for the icons you want displayed. If you already tried that, or the checkboxes are “grayed out”, keep reading. Fix It #3) Restart explorer.exe • Open Task Manager (Ctrl+Shft+Esc) • Click the Processes tab • Find explorer.exe in the list and click on it (turn it blue), then click “End process” button • Restart it. Click File > New Task(Run) then type in explorer.exe and hit Enter Alternative: Open Control Panel > Taskbar and Start Menu– place checks in the checkboxes for the icons you want displayed. Now Let’s Keep The Glitch Gone! If this problem keeps recurring: • Open Control Panel > Sound • Double-click on your “Playback device” (aka “speaker”) • Click on the Advanced tab • Un-check “Allow applications to take exclusive control of this device” Click “Apply” and then OK.

Your missing icon should be back in its proper place in the Notification Area and should stay there. Note: When I am called upon to fix this particular problem, I usually (like, 99% of the time) find that the person’s machine is not up-to-date with all the Windows Updates – usually a missing Service Pack. I do not know that there is a direct cause > effect there. Fact: you want Updates. Install them PLEASE.

Pretty please with sugar on top? Copyright 2007-2011 © “Tech Paul” (Paul Eckstrom).

All Rights Reserved. >> Folks, don’t miss an article! To get Tech – for Everyone articles delivered to your e-mail Inbox,, or to subscribe in your RSS reader,. Part 1 of a series Yesterday I downloaded the official Microsoft beta release of its new operating system — called Windows 7.

(Technically, for those of you i nterested in this sort of thing, it is “Build 7000”.) I opted to install the 32-bit version, as I think this will remain the “standard” and most common. I installed a “clean install”, though I could have “upgraded” an existing Vista install (I recommend ‘clean install’ as a Rule Of Thumb). Microsoft is calling Windows 7 a whole new OS, and are expecting it to replace replace Vista.

In the same way that Vista is replacing Windows XP. I can tell you that it is not a whole new operating system. J&h electronics. I can also tell you that it does not give us the new file system (WinFS) that was originally promised as one of the “three pillars of Vista”. The install itself: My “clean” install on a freshly formatted volume took just over half an hour, and involved at least two automated reboots. (It may have been three.

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Jul 18, 2017  How to speed up your Windows 10 Mobile. Interop unlock your phone to gain the ability to edit registry, (follow above steps). Edit the registry using the app. Jul 20, 2011  40 Best Windows 7 and 8 Registry Tweaks. If you want to lower your latency click on the link headline and follow the instructions how to apply the registry tweak to Windows 7. Download: Click on headline 4. To learn more. Increase the number of maximum connections in Windows 7, which can speed up your internet connection.

Tech Paul’s Fix for When Clock, Volume, Battery Power or Network Icons are Missing and/or Grayed Out in Windows Vista Sometimes, unexpected (and unwanted) changes can happen to our computers that we geeks call ‘glitches’. You install some new program, and some other program you have stops working, for example. Or you uninstall a CD burning program, and find your DVD-RW is now missing. The wonderful world of PC’s! As a tech, solving ‘glitches’ is my game (it’s what I do), and over the years I have seen a few. One such ‘glitch’ I used to see occasionally in XP, and fairly routinely in Vista, is the “missing volume control” (or “network connection”) which is a handy way to control your sound level.

Today, I will tell you t he fix that not only restores the missing icon, but keeps it there. Better still — I won’t have you mucking around in the Registry.

Simple ones first Fix It #1) Press Ctrl+D to bookmark this page and Reboot. Make sure this isn’t a “temp glitch”. 9 times outer 10 restarting your computer solves your ‘glitch’.

If you already tried that, keep reading. Fix It #2) Normally you can re-enable the icons by right-clicking on the Taskbar, choosing Properties and going to the Notification Area tab — place checks in the checkboxes for the icons you want displayed. If you already tried that, or the checkboxes are “grayed out”, keep reading. Fix It #3) Restart explorer.exe • Open Task Manager (Ctrl+Shft+Esc) • Click the Processes tab • Find explorer.exe in the list and click on it (turn it blue), then click “End process” button • Restart it. Click File > New Task(Run) then type in explorer.exe and hit Enter Alternative: Open Control Panel > Taskbar and Start Menu– place checks in the checkboxes for the icons you want displayed. Now Let’s Keep The Glitch Gone! If this problem keeps recurring: • Open Control Panel > Sound • Double-click on your “Playback device” (aka “speaker”) • Click on the Advanced tab • Un-check “Allow applications to take exclusive control of this device” Click “Apply” and then OK.

Your missing icon should be back in its proper place in the Notification Area and should stay there. Note: When I am called upon to fix this particular problem, I usually (like, 99% of the time) find that the person’s machine is not up-to-date with all the Windows Updates – usually a missing Service Pack. I do not know that there is a direct cause > effect there. Fact: you want Updates. Install them PLEASE.

Pretty please with sugar on top? Copyright 2007-2011 © “Tech Paul” (Paul Eckstrom).

All Rights Reserved. >> Folks, don’t miss an article! To get Tech – for Everyone articles delivered to your e-mail Inbox,, or to subscribe in your RSS reader,. Part 1 of a series Yesterday I downloaded the official Microsoft beta release of its new operating system — called Windows 7.

(Technically, for those of you i nterested in this sort of thing, it is “Build 7000”.) I opted to install the 32-bit version, as I think this will remain the “standard” and most common. I installed a “clean install”, though I could have “upgraded” an existing Vista install (I recommend ‘clean install’ as a Rule Of Thumb). Microsoft is calling Windows 7 a whole new OS, and are expecting it to replace replace Vista.

In the same way that Vista is replacing Windows XP. I can tell you that it is not a whole new operating system. J&h electronics. I can also tell you that it does not give us the new file system (WinFS) that was originally promised as one of the “three pillars of Vista”. The install itself: My “clean” install on a freshly formatted volume took just over half an hour, and involved at least two automated reboots. (It may have been three.