Sunday, August 9, 2009

轉貼, 電腦的39個方便動作。

轉貼, 電腦的39個方便動作。

1 在 Window 系統中,多按「右鍵」,有時候會得到意想不到的驚喜喔~

2 在沒有「Winow 鍵」的鍵盤中,要叫出「開始」功能表,只要按 [ Ctrl ] + [ Esc ] 就行了~

3 先壓著 [ Shift ] 在按「刪除」,這樣就可以不經由「資源回收筒」直接刪除了~

4 在許多程式中,按 [ F1 ],可以得到很多的說明

5 大多的人都用滑鼠[ 左鍵 ]拖曳檔案,其實用「右鍵」拖會更好用喔 ^_^

6 壓著 [ Ctrl ] 再拖曳檔案,就一定是「複製」

7 壓著 [ Shift ] 再拖曳檔案到別處,就一定是「移動」

8 在「微軟新輸入法」中,按 [ Ctrl ] + [ Alt ] +[ , ] 就會出現符號鍵盤了~可以拿來輸入標點符號喔~

9 在「檔案總管」中,如果按 [ F5 ] ,它就會重讀目錄、檔案了!

10 要關掉一個程式,按 [ Alt ] + F4 也可以喔~

11 在輸入法模式下按 [ Shift ] + [ 空白鍵 ] 會切換全形與半形

12 按 [ Shift ] + [ Ctrl ] 會切換輸入法喔~(左右兩邊的鍵盤順序不一樣喔~)

13 [ Ctrl ] + [ 空白鍵 ] 的功能是開啟輸入法~

14 要對一個視窗做命令嗎?按 [ Alt ] + [ 空白鍵 ] 試試吧~

15 如果想在很多視窗中切換,其實不用到工具列選;按 [ Alt ] + [ Tab ] 就行了!

16 要「全部選擇」麼?按 [ Ctrl ] + [ A ] 吧!快多了~

17 程式不理你嗎?要強制關閉的話就按 [ Ctrl ] + [ Alt ] + [ Del ] 再選掛掉的程式吧~

18 文件一長串,要怎麼一口氣跳到最後啊?按 [ Ctrl ] + [ End ] 吧~

19 文件一長串,要怎麼一口氣跳到第一行呢?按 [ Ctrl ] + [ Home ] 吧~

20 改檔名其實只要先選擇檔案,再按 [ F2 ] 就行了喔~

21 在 Internet Explorer 中要「重新整理」,你可以按 [ Ctrl ] + [ R ] 或 [ F5 ]

22 按 [Alt ] + [ Enter ] 的效果等同於「內容」

23 微軟鍵盤快速鍵

a. [ WIN ] + [ R ] =「執行」

b. [ WIN ] + [ M ] = 全部視窗最小化

c. [ Shift ] - [ WIN ] + [ M ] = 取消全部視窗最小化

d. [ WIN ] + [ F1 ] = Help

e. [ WIN ] + [ E ] = 檔案總管

f. [ WIN ] + [ F ] = 尋找

g. [ Ctrl ] + [ WIN ] + [ F ] = 顯示「尋找:電腦」

h. [ WIN ] + [ TAB ] = 切換工作列的程式

I. [ WIN ] + [ Break ] = 顯示系統內容

24 到 Winodw 目錄下的 Temp 資料夾看看吧~把這些暫存檔刪了有時候系統會變穩一點喔!

25 記得要定期清理「資源回收筒」喔~

26 想變更一個附檔名的關聯程式嗎?壓著 [ Shift ] 再按滑鼠 [ 右鍵 ] ,這樣就多一個「開啟檔案…」了~接著再選程式吧!

27 如果看到附檔名是「 tmp 」的檔案,不要客氣~砍了吧~

28 想學好電腦的第一步就是「實作」換多看書

29 按 [ Shift ] + [ F10 ] 等同於滑鼠 [ 右鍵 ] 喔~

30 想知道自己的電腦開機時自動做了哪些事嗎?按 [ 開始 ]→ [ 執行 ]→輸入「msconfig」再按確定

31 不要認為裝了防毒程式就沒事了~記得要定時更新病毒碼才有效喔~

32 要一次選擇多個檔案嗎?你可以藉著壓著 [ Ctrl ] 再選來辦到

33 要選擇連串的檔案,你可以壓著 [ Shift ] 再選選看~ ^_^

34 不只滑鼠「左鍵」可以拖曳喔~用「右鍵」拖曳可以輕鬆地選擇「複製」、「搬移」、「捷徑」。

35 使自動播放暫時失效:放入 CD 時按著 [ shift ] 即可。

36 在檔案總管呈現所有樹狀結構:單擊磁碟機後,按數字區的 * 鍵(在 9 的上方)

37 工作列是可以自行移動到螢幕的上方,下方,左方跟右方的。試試看吧!除此以外,也可以拉動邊框,改變它的大小。

38 壓著 [ Shift ] 雙擊「我的電腦」的話,可以用「檔案總管」開啟~

39 [ Ctrl ] + 的功能

x 剪下

c 複製

v 貼上

a 全選

h 向前刪除 (一次一個)

j 或 m 增加一行

z 復原

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Making friends - and money - on MySpace

Making friends - and money - on MySpace

It's not just for musicians anymore: Entrepreneurs are using the social networking site to drum up new business, meet others in their field, get advice, and more.



Entrepreneurs are striking gold on MySpace, the social networking site best known for teens, dating profiles, and amateur bands. Many young small-business owners - particularly in fields like clothing, graphic design, photography, publishing, and real estate - are discovering that they can effectively advertise on the site to a narrow, but often enthusiastic demographic.

Take Daniel Barbalho. Six months ago, Barbalho, 26, a recent graduate of Georgia Tech living in Atlanta, started Esperanza Clothing Co. with partner and former roommate Bart Sasso to sell edgy, Atlanta-themed T-shirts to local hipsters.


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At first, Barbalho brought their wares to local music shows and talked to small store owners. Then, about three months ago, he started an Esperanza Clothing profile on MySpace, joining more than 60 million other users. "We didn't have a lot of money starting out," he says, "and we saw MySpace as free advertising."

Barbalho started adding users in Atlanta to Esperanza's "friends" list, asking them to visit the profile, post comments, and visit the company's website to order a shirt. Soon, people that Barbalho had never contacted, from places like California, Canada, and Brazil, began ordering shirts and posting pictures of themselves wearing Esperanza clothes on their own profiles.

Good publicity, it seems, came easily. MTV Spring Break's official DJ stumbled across the MySpace profile and asked for free stuff. A writer working for Lucky magazine sent a message through the profile, asking if she could write up one of Esperanza's shirts. Barbalho was even able to contact publicists working for OutKast, an Atlanta-born rap duo, about getting the group to wear his shirts - and one of them ended up singing at an Esperanza fashion show.

"MySpace is the only ad campaign we've done so far," says Barbalho, who lists the profile address on his business card. "It is our greatest marketing tool."

Making connections
Many entrepreneurs find they can drum up new business by posting profiles to the site, placing ads in its classifieds section, and developing contacts through bulletins and one-on-one messaging. In fact, MySpace has about 8,200 user-created groups dedicated to entrepreneurship and business. Some of these claim as many as 17,000 members, although most groups get only a few new posts per day. The most active ones target specific niches, like filmmakers or real-estate investors.

Currently, small businesses spend about 80% of their advertising resources on traditional media like local TV, newspapers, and direct mail, according to a survey by Princeton, N.J.-based Kelsey Group. And while 54% have a website, only 10% believe that the Internet is effective in generating new customers. Yet small businesses that use social-networking sites can gain an advantage over their rivals and advertise and network in new ways.

For Erica Gabrielle, an actor and head-shot photographer in Los Angeles, MySpace is steadily replacing the ads she places in L.A. trade publications. "MySpace offers great access to certain people, and networking," she says. "There are a lot of actors, directors and musicians I'm networking with now that I've never worked with before."

Indeed, business users say the ability to make connections with others in their field, get and give advice, and find potential employees is what distinguishes MySpace and other social networks from classified-ad sites like Craigslist.com and traditional web sites.

Barbalho says that's what helped his business. MySpace friends introduced the T-shirt maker to buyers at Bloomingdale's, Nordstrom (Research), and Urban Outfitters (Research). "I started meeting people in the industry, and they've introduced me to the store owners," he says. And other friends in cities like Miami, Boston, and Chicago, and L.A. have offered to help sell the shirts to stores in their own cities.

Other business owners say the site helps them target specific communities and demographics. Wendy Manning, 34, created a MySpace profile for her Denver-based independent film company, Double Edge, to promote its short films. When Double Edge was ready to make a full-length feature, Manning reached out to all of her profile's 14,000 friends in the Denver area looking for help.

"We said, 'We need bicycles, and if you're in Denver, or if you're an actor that looks the part, join us,' " she recalls. "We got a huge response and got all the logistics covered." To promote the new film, Manning plans on contacting MySpace members - who can be sorted by age, gender, and zip code - in cities where it's screening.

Glory days ending?
Some worry that as MySpace grows, it will become less welcoming to small business. The site, which was purchased by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. last August, is seeking ways to more effectively monetize its content. That push could make it harder for small firms' profiles to stand out from big businesses' on the site, and to compete for eyeballs against paid advertisements.

Manning recalls that when Chris DeWolfe, one of MySpace's founders and now its CEO, discovered Double Edge's profile in 2003, he offered to help promote its short movie on MySpace's homepage.

Since MySpace was bought by News Corp (Research)., Manning says she's noticed that many of the front-page ads now go to major artists and films, like singer Daniel Powter and the movie An American Haunting. "Now they're promoting big films," says Manning, "but before they were bought they were promoting us." Still, there are spaces on its front and filmmakers page reserved for unknown artists and movies.

For those who have turned MySpace into a store front, the site has become indispensable. Tino Buntic of Toronto, 30, who runs a sales-lead network through a web page and a MySpace profile, says his profile is essential to reaching more people. "If MySpace charged a couple dollars per month, that would be worth it," he says.

And small businesses, like big businesses, want to be where the buzz is. "It's about being in the right space at the right time," says T-shirt-maker Barbalho, "and the right place right now is MySpace."

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

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