Windows xp power button shutdown




















Right now the pc is not letting me click on anything except home, sleep and lock. Are there any other ways you can suggest without having to shut down via power button? Thanks Ranchy! I updated the title. Thanks so much to everyone who contributed comments about Vista — great job!

Thanks in advance to those who will suggest us the needed stps. Thanks for this great tip. What version of Windows are you using? Does your keyboard have two Ctrl keys? If so, does the problem happen with both? Just btw. Help me! When i open my computer the microsoft runing image is apeared but after that theres no program will apear in the monitor even i wait it for a day.. Your email address will not be published. Instead, you could use the Windows key.

Pressing the u key selects whichever menu item has an underlined u. Windows remembers the last option you selected when shutting down. If the wrong option is selected, you can change the selected option with the arrow keys before you press Enter. Just press the power button. If that makes the PC sleep or hibernate instead, see Section 8. Restart quits all open programs, then quits and restarts Windows again automatically.

Log off quits all programs, disconnects from the network, and then displays the Welcome screen so that the next person can log in. If you use this feature, you know who you are. When you choose it, your terminal session disconnects, but the server remembers what you were doing. When you reconnect to Terminal Services, you return to your previous session. Everything looks as it did before you disconnected. Hibernate shuts down the machine after it memorizes the state of your software, including all open operating system files, applications, and documents.

Behind the scenes, it saves all this memorized information into a file on your hard disk. On a workgroup computer, you may not see the Hibernate command. When you do, the Standby option changes to say Hibernate see Figure The beauty of this feature is that when you start the computer again, everything returns to the way it was when you shut down— fast.

The same documents appear, the same programs are running, and so on. Hibernate, in other words, offers the speed and convenience of Standby, with the safety of Turn Off. When you shut down the computer in Hibernation mode, the next startup is impressively fast. This instant-on characteristic makes it tempting to use the hibernation feature every time you shut down your computer. Consequently, Windows may seem to slow down over time.

Furthermore, the Plug and Play feature described in Chapter 14 might not work when you plug in some new piece of equipment. The solution is to compromise. Use the Hibernate mode most of the time, but shut the computer down or restart it every now and then.

If you bought your PC with Windows XP Pro preinstalled, you may have noticed that it starts up faster than before, anyway.



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