XP User Account Configuration
User Accounts
You can select a picture to identify the account. When you're
logged on to the system under your username, this picture, along
with your username, appears at the top of the Start menu both
can be edited
Multiuser Features
Like Windows 2000, but unlike Windows 95, 98, and Me, the ability
to log in multiple users simultaneously plays a big role in Windows
XP. There is a default Administrator account set up when Windows
XP is first installed, but you can create as many accounts as
you need later, depending on how many people will be using the
machine.
Each user, once he or she has an account, can customize XP to
his or her liking. Individual users get their own subfolders in
the Documents And Settings folder; this folder serves as a centralized
location for most personalized information, such as the Start
Menu, Favorites, and Documents settings.
Adjust Various Visual Effects
1. Open up the control panel
2. Go under system and click on the advanced tab
3. Click settings under Performance options
4. You can now change various graphical effects (mainly animations
and shadows)
Safely Remove Hardware Icon
If you have an USB device attached to your system, you will
notice an icon in the Notification area, which - when clicked
- will give you the option to Stop your hardware, before you unplug
it.
It is possible that you never unplug this hardware. So how do
you get rid of the icon? As far as I know the only way is to right-click
the notification area, and selecting Properties. Under the Notification
area heading, click Customize. Find the Safely Remove Hardware
icon and select Always hide in the Behavior column next to it
(press OK and Apply to back out).
Turn of CD Auto Play
• Open My Computer • Right click on your CD ROM
and choose Properties • Click on the Auto Play tab
• In the drop down box you can choose the Action for each
choice shown in the drop down box
Or
1. Go to Start->Run->gpedit.msc
2. Computer Config -> Administrative Template -> System
3. Double click Turn off Autoplay
4. Enable it.
Make a Windows Boot Disk
Neither Win2K nor WinME has the ability to create a simple, basic,
DOS- based boot floppy (a "startup disk") unless you
jump through hoops or do things in nonstandard ways. Because XP
is the fusion of Win2K and Win9x/ME, I assumed it would follow
the same "no boot floppy" tack. But instead, I was surprised
to poke around in XP and see that the format option there does
indeed offer a "Create MS-DOS Startup Disk."
Use the disk to boot PC without any problems the DOS boot message
will show up as "Microsoft Windows Millennium." [Version
4.90.300]
Speed up the Start Menu
The default speed of the Start Menu is pretty slow, but you
can fix that by editing a Registry Key. Fire up the Registry Editor
and navigate to the following key:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER \ Control Panel \ Desktop \ MenuShowDelay By
default, the value is 400. Change this to a smaller value, such
as 0, to speed it up.
If this doesn't work for some reason, then you might try the
following: Navigate to Display Properties then Appearance then
Advanced and turn off the option titled Show menu shadow. You
will get much better overall performance.
Display Hibernate Option on the Shut Down Dialog
For some reason, Hibernate isn't available from the default
Shut Down dialog. But you can enable it simply enough, by holding
down the SHIFT key while the dialog is visible. Now you see it,
now you don't!
Display the Sharing Tab in Folder Properties
In Windows 2000, getting to the Sharing options for a folder
was simple: Just right-click, choose Properties, and you'd see
a Sharing tab. In Windows XP, this feature is missing by default,
but you can make the system display the Sharing tab if desired.
Simply open up Folder Options (My Computer, then Tools, Folder
Options) and navigate to the View tab. In the Advanced Settings
section, scroll down to the bottom and uncheck Use simple file
sharing (Recommended), a Mickey Mouse feature if there ever was
one. Now share your folders on the LAN as you would in Windows
2000.
Close Multiple Windows
If you just opened a number of separate, related windows (a
folder inside a folder, and so on), there's an easier way to close
them all than one-at-a-time. Hold down the Shift key as you click
the X caption button in the upper-right corner of the last window
opened. Doing so closes that window and all windows that came
before it.
Disable Error Reporting
• Open Control Panel
• Click on System.
• Then click on the Advanced tab
• Click on the error-reporting button at the bottom of the
window
• Select Disable error reporting.
• Click OK
• Click OK
Windows
Official XP Professional Documentation
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