20 Techie Problems You Can Fix

Tech Tips for Writers is an (almost) weekly post on overcoming Tech Dread. I’ll cover issues that friends, both real-time and virtual, have shared. Feel free to post a comment about a question you have. I’ll cover it in a future Tip.


There are about twenty problems that cause eighty percent of the tech stoppages. I’m going to tell you what those are and how to solve them. Trust me. They’re easier than you think to solve. I routinely teach them to third, fourth and fifth graders, and then they teach their parents.


I’ll tell you the problem first, then why it generally occurs and the most common solution to fix it. Here goes:


Deleted a file


Why? By accident or changed my mind          


What to do: Open Recycle Bin; right-click—restore


Can’t exit a program                                        


Why: Can’t find the X or Quit tool. This happens with young children’s programs and those pesky internet ads that marketers don’t want you to be able to exit


What to do: Alt F4 works 95% of the time. Try that.


Can’t find Word                                               


Why: Shortcut moved, was deleted by accident or became inactive        


What to do: Right-click on desktop—select ‘New’—“Word Document”



Keyboard doesn’t work   


                               


Why: Lost the connection                               


What to do: First check to be sure it actually isn’t working by pushing the ‘Num Lock’ on the right side. Does the ‘Num Lock’ light go on/off? If it does, the problem is something other than the keyboard. If it does, try this: Re-plug cord into back of tower or reboot


Mouse doesn’t work                                        


Why: Lost the connection                               


What to do: Move it around to see if the cursor moves. If it doesn’t, re-plug cord into back or reboot


Start button is gone                                          


Why: Task bar disappeared                            


What to do: Push Windows button in the lower right corner of the keyboard


No sound          


Why: Mute is on; Volume is down; headphones are unplugged      


What to do: Unmute the sound or turn it up from the lower right corner of the screen; plug headphones in; reboot


Do you notice how often I say reboot? Sometimes, the computer simply gets confused and drops actions out of the queue which means they stop working. All you have to do is restart the system to get things back to normal.


Can’t find a file                                               


Why: Saved wrong, moved                              


What to do: Push Start button—Start search; when you find it, take note of where it is. Better yet, resave in a location you will remember


Menu command grayed out                             


Why: You’re in another command                  


What to do: Push escape 3 times. This gets you out of whatever you were working on and makes the command you’d like to use available


What’s today’s date?                                       


Why: You forgot!                                             


What to do: Hover over the clock in the lower right corner; if you’re in Word, start to type the date and it will prompt you with the current date. Another way to enter the date if you’re in word is with the shortkey Shift Alt D


Taskbar gone


Why: Student interference    


What to do: Push the Windows button on the keyboard (between Ctrl and Alt on the left side). If it’s been hidden, drag the top border up to expose it


Taskbar was moved                                         


Why: Student interference                              


What to do: Click on an open part of the taskbar and drag it to the bottom of screen (or wherever you prefer it to be)


Desktop icons messed up                                


Why: Student interference; you added more icons and now everything’s confused


What to do: Right click on screen—select ‘Sort by’ and select the method you’d like the icons arranged (name, type, etc.)


  Computer frozen                                             


Why: Mouse frozen; keyboard frozen, dialogue box open                       


What to do: Check solutions in this list. If nothing works, reboot


Program frozen                                               


Why: Dialog box open; not selected on taskbar                                          


What to do: Look around the screen until you find a dialogue box open. It’s probably asking for input. Once you supply the answer, it will close and your program will work again. Clear the dialog box. Or, the program may be blinking on the taskbar because it accidentally fell asleep down there. Click the program on taskbar to reactivate


I erased my document/text                              


Why: Ooops                                                     


What to do: Ctrl Z


Screen says “Ctrl-Alt-Del” 


Why: You rebooted                                          


What to do: Hold down Ct Alt—then push Delete. This will either bring you to the log-in screen or to the desktop


Program closed down


Why: Ooops                                                     


What to do: Is it open on the taskbar?  If so—click on it; if not, reopen program—see if the right sidebar shows that it saved a back-up and select that to open


Tool bar missing at top of www


Why: Pushing F11 key                                    


What to do: Push F11 key


Toolbar missing in MS Office (2003)


Why: Closed by accident                                


What to do: Right click in toolbar area; select missing toolbar


Follow me




Jacqui Murray  is the author of the popular  Building a Midshipman , the story of her daughter’s journey from high school to United States Naval Academy. She is webmaster for six blogs, an  Amazon Vine Voice  book reviewer, a columnist for Examiner.com and TeachHUB, Editorial Review Board member for Journal for Computing TeachersCisco guest blogger, Technology in Education featured blogger, and IMS tech expert. She is   the editor of a K-6 technology curriculumK-8 keyboard curriculumK-6 Digital Citizenship curriculum, creator of technology training books for middle school and ebooks on technology in education.  Currently, she’s editing a thriller that should be out to publishers next summer. Contact Jacqui at her writing office or her tech lab,  Ask a Tech Teacher.


Follow me .



Filed under: tech tips for writers, writing Tagged: tech tips, tips, writers
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 17, 2012 23:28
No comments have been added yet.