A new computer ships with a raft of programs, but quite which programs you get depends where you purchase your computer but it can also depend on which country you live in. For example, in the UK, all new computers come with Windows pre-loaded, yet in Thailand some come with Linux although this is a recent development.
How useful are these programs that come ‘free’ with your new computer? Well, it varies, to be frank, and in the remainder of this article we will take a look at some of the most common pre-loaded programs.
Sometimes you receive ‘Notepad’, sometimes you get ‘Wordpad’ and sometimes you get both. Wordpad is a more sophisticated version of Notepad and it can open old ‘Write’ documents. It can also open all rich text files (.rtf) as well as plain text (.txt) files.
Most computer users see Wordpad as an upgrade to Notepad and in numerous ways that is what it is, yet it does not have enough features to make me want to use it. I use Notepad each and every day, yet I very hardly ever use Wordpad. Wordpad can be regarded as a halfway house to MS Word the documents of which it can also read.
Wordpad is a practical program if you do not have Word, because you can create attractive-looking documents and embed sound and picture files and text can be coloured. Unfortunately, there is no spell-checker, but it can open Excel files too, which can be convenient.
If you have the MS Office suite, then Wordpad is redundant. If you do not have MS Office, download OpenOffice, which is a free Open Source contender to Office.
Outlook Express is a capable email client that can actually perform some tasks that Outlook can not. It also has an address book. Outlook Express is useful enough for most users, but if it is not, download Opera and integrate the email client and address book that is available with it.
The calculator that comes free with Windows is extremely impressive. The version that comes with Windows 7 can be turned into a mathematical, a scientific, a statisticians”, a programmers’ calculator and a number of others besides. You will absolutely never need another calculator if you have this tool. In one word it is excellent.
Paint is a passable image editor. It is not especially sophisticated, yet it can perform a number of useful functions. If you require more and there are a lot who will, you will be able to find much better free image editors on the Internet.
Windows Media Player is a very robust media player of sound, pictures and movies, yet occasionally you have to go hunting for a new codex, if you have to play something in an unusual format. This is not a big drawback. WMP is a very helpful and fully-equipped tool. You can play radio from all over the world through it too.
The system tools supplied with Windows are satisfactory. They will monitor system resources and help you take care of your hard drives, but many users move on to more specialized tools in the long run.
Internet Explorer is a decent browser, but again, lots of people drift away from it to use other browsers (|and there are quite a few). In short, the tools and programs supplied with Windows are all right to get you going (although there are a few gems), normally, you will want to upgrade, and this can often be done by downloading other programs free of charge.
Owen Jones, the article of this article, writes on several subjects, but is now involved with the wireless broadband router. If you would like to know more, please visit our web site at Best Router For Gaming Online
Some Facts About Satellite Radio Technology
Satellite radio technology is the equivalent of cable or satellite television and it is certainly here to stay. There are several reasons for this: the quality of the broadcasts is higher, the quality of the apparatus’s reception is higher and the general coverage of the station, that is to say the so-called satellite’s footprint is far greater too.
This means that if you travel long distances, you will be able to stick with the same channel without having to look for a new one every forty or fifty miles as you need to do with AM or FM radio channels.
In order to reach this quality, the recording and playback speed needs to be around the 384 kbps level. The music tracks are catalogued in a similar way to the MP3 system, which uses names called ID3 tags.
Each station on satellite radio attempts to establish its own identity. A music station may try this by playing music only of one type or from only one period or decade. This means that you may get a satellite radio station called 1970′s Punk music or Twentieth Century Classical Music.
On some stations, the music controller or disc jockey will choose, say, fifty minutes worth of music, will listen to it in order to ascertain that the quality and the order are correct and then let the computer play it over the airwaves. This leaves ten minutes every hour for the news and then the programme can be repeated automatically.
Satellite transmission uses digital recordings and each channel is encoded on a different frequency. Similarly, each decoder, say, in your car or your home needs to recognize and decode each channel separately as well. This coding and decoding is done very quickly, in fact in what is called ‘real time’.
The resulting binary or digital code is then turned into into analogue signals so that your speakers can reproduce it. This process produces sound which is just about of CD quality.
The transmitting satellites are in a geo-stationary orbit at 23,000 miles above the Earth and have a large footprint which is the name given to the region of ground that is capable of receiving their broadcasts.
In America, for example, the two fields concentrated on at first were the densely populated east and west coasts in order to maximize possible income. One satellite would be incapable of covering the whole of the United States in that orbit.
In order to receive satellite transmissions, you will have to use a special antenna on your decoder. This antenna must be capable of receiving L-band transmissions for it to be of use.
These new antennas are a big improvement on the satellite dishes (similar to those used for satellite TV) that one used to have to have in order to take advantage of satellite radio technology
Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on a variety of topics, but is now involved with Bose radio alarm clocks. If you would like to know more, please visit our web site at Bose Digital Radio.