Showing posts with label video tutorials. Show all posts
Showing posts with label video tutorials. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

How To Repair a Laptop





Repairing Your Laptop With Your Own Hands – a Basic Guide.

In this age of modular computers, laptop repair is easy-at least if you know exactly what you’re doing.Many of the components of a laptop, including even the motherboard and RAM, and even the hard drive, are completely modular and can simply be detached and lifted out of the laptop. This makes laptop repair a very simple job, just so long as you make sure that you understand the manual. Another thing that you should do when repairing your laptop is to carefully make notes about where each thing goes as you dismantle the device. It’s better to be safe than sorry, and it is impossible for anyone who is not a qualified technician to remember where all the intricate parts, screws and components that make up the average laptop go.



If the connector within the laptop uses specific settings, you need to make careful notes of those settings as well. A set of precision tools, such as jewelers or watchmakers use, can also only be helpful. Remember that most parts that fail within a laptop require a simple replacement, and if you can manage to do this yourself instead of hauling the laptop over to a professional, you can save yourself a considerable amount of money in technician’s fees.

It’s specially recommended that you go in for this considering what I already described of the essentially modular nature of laptop components. Why should you pay a technician to do a job that essentially consists of no more than simply undoing one or two and catches, and lifting out one component and replacing it with another. This is essentially what much of laptop repair today consists of.

Let’s discuss in brief different aspects of laptop repair that a user should commonly be capable of. One thing that can cause problems with booting your system is a faulty RAM chip. This is easy to handle, and usually just involves replacing the RAM.

There is a panel underneath the laptop that gives access to the RAM, and you will need to unscrew this panel. Beneath, you will find the RAM, held in place by two clips. Release these clips, and the RAM will come up in your hands, after which replacing it is a simple enough matter. Replacing your hard drive or optical drive is a similarly simple process. Consult your user manual for details and remember what I’ve said about taking careful notes when you try your hand at laptop repair and disassembly. Now I am going to introduce a best laptop repairing course video course from online. Laptop Repair Made Easy.



Here's some of the Topics Covered in Laptop Repair Made Easy...

Laptop Repair Basics

    CD/DVD Drives - info, repair and replacing.
    Batteries - all about batteries and how to find replacements cheaply.
    Tools and Accessories - for repairing laptops faster.
    Motherboards - info, repair and replacement.
    Memory - info, adding memory and finding replacements parts.
    Hard Drives - all about hard disks and how to replace them.

Laptop Screens                                                                            


    Display & Inverters Troubleshooting
    LCD Screen Teardown

Power Supply

    Power Supply Troubleshooting
    Replacing a Powerjack
    Testing the Power Supply With a Multimeter

Keyboard

    How to Remove/Replace a Laptop's Keyboard
    Keyboard Cleaning and Finding Part Numbers
    Replacing Keys on Any Laptop Model

Laptop Teardowns (Tearing a Laptop Apart - Every part is covered!)

  HP 6730b
    Toshiba A505
    Macbook Air (Mac)
    Acer Aspire One (Netbook)
    Others
  
Hard Disk Replacement

    Mac Book Pro Hard Disk Replacement
    Battery Replacement
    CD/DVD Drive Replacement
    Adding/Replacing Laptop Memory
    Touchpad Troubleshooting
    Processor Replacement
    Laptop Fan Cleaning
    Wireless Card Replacement

THOUSANDS of people have already successfully learned how to repair laptops with Laptop Repair Made Easy!






Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Why Your PC is Slow Down?

Why Your PC is Slow Down?

While there are a lot of things that can slow down your PC, they generally tend to fall into a few simple categories. Here are five things that contribute to that slowdown.

Top 5 Causes for Slow Down Your PC

First of all, a lot of time, you're running on hardware that's simply not powerful enough to handle the software you're running. That computer you bought a few years ago might not be up to handling this year's software. Make sure you're meeting the recommended specs of anything you're running.





More Causes for Slow Down Your PC

If you're one of those people who likes to put everything right on the desktop where you can get to it quickly? Maybe rethink that. Everything you put on the desktop is one less bit of computing power your computer has at its disposal. Keep it tidy and keep it fast.

Get an antivirus program - preferably one that can scan for adware and spyware - and do a scan of your entire system. This is one of the most common and annoying problems that can really gum up the works, stealing resources from programs that need the power - even bringing your system to a standstill in some cases.

Other Causes for Slow Down Your PC

Do you have a lot of installed programs? Do you NEED them all? Go through your uninstall function and see if you can get rid of any of them. Even if you're not using them, usually, they're still hooked right into Windows and taking up resources. Make sure you have your original software just in case you need to reinstall.

If your computer is taking forever to launch, look in your startup folder and see if you have a ton of things launching when you boot up Windows. Startup programs all compete for resources at the same time and can slow your system to a crawl.

How to remove virus from windows without antivirus software's

How to remove virus from from windows without antivirus software's..

This Tutorial Includes That How to detect and remove virus, Trojan horse, ,malware, spyware etc.. without anti virus, live show in windows Xp also work in windows 7 and 8

its is very simple to understand..
any one can do their own..
simple technique..








Thanks for Read it....

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

What is Defragmenting and When to Defrag Your Computer

What Is Defragging?

Do You Want to learn about defragging a computer? Here, see information about defragging so you can help your system run faster.

Defragging - short for defragmentation - is a solution to this issue. What the computer does when you're defragging your hard drive, is it takes all these big and little files and sorts them out, so the files reside closer together. This logical moving and resorting of files reduces the time it takes for the system to access one file to the next. This can add up to a substantial speed increase and time savings.


1) What is Defragmenting and When to Defrag Your Computer.




 2) How to Defragment in windows 7




Facts About Defragging a Computer

Every time you install a program or add a file, it gets added somewhere on your hard disk…somewhere. The system basically inserts the file wherever it's convenient. After a while, those files can be spread over the whole hard disk, which increases the time it takes to access them. This is called fragmentation.

Information About Defragging a Computer

A computer shouldn't need to be defragged very often - you might want to schedule your system to defrag maybe every other week or so, maybe once a month. On Windows, the defragging utility can analyze the hard drive and tell you just how fragmented your hard drive is. If you're above 10% or so, you should probably defrag your drive. And if you notice a general speed decline over time, that's also a sign that your system should be defragged.


 Note- defragging is only a problem with traditional hard drives with physical platters. Solid state and flash drives do not need to be optimized like this, and in fact, you could probably damage them if you do so.



Thanks for read it.....

How to Change Windows XP Sound Effects

It's easy to change Windows XP sound effects to one of the many options provided on the computer system. See how to change Windows XP sound effects to noises or sounds that you prefer.
1)   How to Change Windows XP Sound Effects



Follow these steps to Change Windows XP Sound Effects

  •     First Click On Start Menu / Settings / Control Panel / Sounds and Audio Devices
  •     Then Click On Sound tab
  •     Then Click On sound you want to change from list
  •     Then Click On play button on the bottom to hear the sound you've selected
  •     Then Click On 'Browse' button to find a .wav sound to exchange for the current sound effect
  •     Then Click On 'Save As' button
  •     Then Type name for the sound effect
  •     Then Click On 'OK'.


2) How to Change Windows XP Sound Pitch Level With Sound Effect Manager






Tanks for Read it...

Sunday, November 25, 2012

How to Download and install Linux (video).

How to Download and install Linux 

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How To Download and Install Windows 8


Preview the next version of Windows by downloading it or free and installing it on Virtualbox. This will let you install it and use it without screwing up the rest of your computer.






How To Install Dual Operating Systems

How To Install Dual Operating Systems


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2)

How to install windows 7 (video).


How to install windows 7,windows vista , full tutorial video's.





How to make Windows XP faster (video).

Hi, In this video I will provide you all with 15 Steps on how to improve the speed of Windows XP.

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How to Reinstall Windows XP ( video, XP, Vista, and 7 ISOs in description!)

Has computer gotten really slow after the past few years? Want it to be nice and snappy like the day you took it out of the box?
Well here's how, including saving your data and reinstalling your programs.




You can download ISO images of XP, Vista, and 7 here: https://dl.dropbox.com These can be used to reinstall without bloatware, for example, or if you lost your original install disc. These do NOT include a license key - get your own! On big box machines, the license key is on the side for a desktop or the bottom for a laptop. In that case, you need to use the OEM ISO. If you purchased Windows yourself, it might be OEM or Retail, check to be sure. You can recover the key using a tool like Speecy or SIW if necessary (note: on big box machines, it seems that you MUST use the key on the side of the machine - the one that Recuva finds doesn't work. If you purchased the copy yourself, the key that those tools find is right one.). I have the ISOs for XP Home and Pro (both with SP3), in Retail and OEM variants. You need to use a tool like ImgBurn to burn the ISO to a CD for use (on Win7 machines or Macs, you already have one built in).

NOTE: These instructions involve a regular Windows XP install disc. (the install steps aren't the same with a recovery disc or partition) You can also use one of the OEM ISOs from the above link with the license key on the side of your big box PC to reinstall.

Also, note that when installing Windows, this was all done in virtualbox, so that's why there was a picture (my wallpaper) in the bottom-right hand corner of the screen.


How to Install Windows XP (video)

Tired of your old Windows or Linux OS? Need a change? Compatibility issues? Well, in this video, you will learn how you can install Windows XP over an existing OS, or onto a blank Hard Drive.

Items Needed:
Windows XP disc or equivalent
Product Key*

*Some versions of the Windows XP install DO NOT require a product key, such as recovery install discs.