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Cheap Tricks for computer success

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Print Quickly

This trick from Mindconnection replaces the original given by We Compute. While We Compute's trick works, this one is even faster.

Simply right mouse click on a file, and you'll see a menu appear. "Print" is one of the menu options. If you always work from Windows Explorer to locate, open, move, or copy files, your computing life will be much easier than doing so from, say, Word or Excel. This is one example why.

Free *Cheap Trick* of the Week: September 20, 1999

 

More Printing Tips

  • The above discussion assumes you actually want to print. But think of "printing" as "converting to dead tree format and costing money." Then, you will be more careful about printing to begin with. This helps the environment and saves you money.
     
  • To avoid paper jams, observe the grain of the paper. One side of the paper is rougher than the other. This is the grain side. You want your paper rollers to grab this side. When you open the ream, the grain side of every sheet is facing the same direction. Observe that direction. Load your paper with the grain side up. If it jams, then turn the paper over so the grain side is down. Whichever way produces the least number of jams, do it that way going forward.
     
  • Don't select the highest quality print setting by default. Think of "print quality" as "ink intensity." Not only do you use up more ink, but you increase the likelihood of the worst possible paper jams because that ink does soak the paper and makes it soft. Much of what you print doesn't need much quality. Faxes, which people used to read routinely, are around 100 dpi. Setting your printer to 300 dpi for "I want to read this long article later" makes sense. Setting it to 1200 dpi for that purpose does not.
     
  • Use the manufacturer's ink. While it's true that a generic replacement brand costs less per cartridge or that it's cheaper to refill a cartridge rather than to buy a new one, the reality is you will "save money" at a much higher cost than if you bought the manufacturer's ink cartridges. Why is this? The cartridges and inks have patents, so the generic can't be identical (which protects the manufacturers who invest big buck in R&D to make great new products). The knock-off cartridges do things like leak, dry up, smear the page, soak through the page, etc., all of which defeat the purpose of printing in the first place. To avoid generating garbage, buy your ink from a local office supply store and bring your empty cartridges back to them for recycling. This helps support your local stores and it helps protect the environment.
     
  • Clean your printer. It's amazing how little care computer peripherals actually get. Mice and keyboards routinely build up gunk and then people seem surprised when they stop working. Printers have maintenance needs, too. Use canned air (or your house vacuum set to blow) to blow out dust from inside the printer enclosure. Don't blow air across the print head or related mechanism; focus your efforts on the paper handling system. If your printer sits on a table, move it from that spot and clean underneath it. You will likely find ink residue and dust, both of which can cause premature failure.
     

And here's a tip about printing versus not printing. One reason many people print is they want to store a document in a paper system. Big clue, here, you have a computer. Store your documents electronically, not as sheets of dead tree material. You can buy a PDF printer driver for very little money, and many programs even come with this. You probably have one already. A PDF printer driver gives you a "printer" option for converting a document to PDF instead of to paper. It's very convenient.

Also, you should have a good flatbed scanner, so you can convert your paper archives to electronic ones. There's no reason to store all of your records as paper, anymore. Not only does that take up space, but you can't "search" on a paper-holding filing cabinet to locate a document. And there are many other advantages to electronic archiving over paper archiving.

 

 

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This material, copyright Mindconnection. Don't make all of your communication electronic. Hug somebody!