GKatReliable
Programmer
Sorry for these elementary questions, I frequent other Tek-Tips programming forums and found this one on XP and hope some small problems can be answered.
Kid is going to college.
Mom sez go get him a notebook computer.
We come home with a top of the line Sony with XP Home preinstalled.
I do development with NT at work and have 98 at home, and go back to the MS-DOS days.
Two questions for you:
When online via modem connection, whatever happened to the connection status icon that used to be in the system tray, the one that looks like 2 PC's that are flashing green back and forth. I see no way to monitor a modem connection in XP, even to tell you that you are online or not, or provide the ability to disconnect.
The other problem with PCs nowadays is that you no longer get the operating system and installed software on CDs when you get it home and open the box. The only thing you are are allowed to do is create a restore set of CDs (one time only) and in the event of a problem, overlay your hard drive with how it came from the factory, instead of being able to do a clean install or reinstall. How do you folks get around not having Win XP Home on media when you purchase a new machine?
Regards,
Glenn Koproske
Kid is going to college.
Mom sez go get him a notebook computer.
We come home with a top of the line Sony with XP Home preinstalled.
I do development with NT at work and have 98 at home, and go back to the MS-DOS days.
Two questions for you:
When online via modem connection, whatever happened to the connection status icon that used to be in the system tray, the one that looks like 2 PC's that are flashing green back and forth. I see no way to monitor a modem connection in XP, even to tell you that you are online or not, or provide the ability to disconnect.
The other problem with PCs nowadays is that you no longer get the operating system and installed software on CDs when you get it home and open the box. The only thing you are are allowed to do is create a restore set of CDs (one time only) and in the event of a problem, overlay your hard drive with how it came from the factory, instead of being able to do a clean install or reinstall. How do you folks get around not having Win XP Home on media when you purchase a new machine?
Regards,
Glenn Koproske