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Title “Suddenly…” OR “I didn’t do anything!” Part 1
Subtitle: Or — a month’s log of a Sun City Anthem Computer Club “house
call” doctor
By Charles W, Davis, Newsletter Editor & Webmaster, Sun
City Anthem Computer Club, Henderson, NV
Chas@anthemwebs.com
www.myscacc.org
In working to help Club members and others with their computer
problems during the Thursday morning Computer Talk sessions, or more
often when making “house calls,” I often hear strange tales that
usually involve acts of some gremlin like creature. However, gremlins
are more closely related to mechanical problems in aircraft.
Generally the caller’s comments start with “all of a sudden” or
“suddenly” and end with “I didn't’ do anything.” I can only surmise
that it was probably one of cartoonist Bill Keane’s ghostly imps “Not
Me.” “Nobody” or even “Ida Know.”
Some recent examples:
“Suddenly…”
One morning a couple of weeks ago, I received a call and the person on
the other end of the phone connection was obviously very upset. She
exclaimed: “Suddenly all of my desktop icons are gone! I didn’t do
anything! Please help me!”
This situation seemed to be serious. I had never heard of this
happening. I didn’t have anything on the calendar for another two
hours so I hopped in my 1999 “Sapphire Blue Mica” (marketing division
color name of course) Miata for the short drive up the hill to her
Tall Mesa Village home. She was right, the icons were indeed missing.
A simple right click on the blank desktop, hover over Arrange Icons
by: and then click on Show Desktop Icons. This was definitely an act
by the “little people.” As I said, I hadn’t heard of this situation
before. Therefore, it must have been “Not Me” wishing to get off the
hook by whispering in my ear how I might arrive at the solution. Since
the club member was in the back room and the house girl had let me in,
I quickly left the scene.
The next day the same lady called and said that her “My Computer” Icon
was missing from the desktop. Realizing that it wasn’t the normal
desktop shortcut icon, I was puzzled. Not thinking things through, I
again slid onto the seat in the Miata and shortly arrived on the
scene. Sure enough most icons were visible, but the “My Computer” icon
was not in its normal position. It wasn’t immediately visible. I later
noticed the top edge of the icon protruding just above the task bar.
Once again, I moved the pointer to a blank spot on the desktop, a
right click on the mouse and chose Arrange Icons by and chose Name.
The My Desktop icon again assumed its prominence at the upper left.
She said that she didn’t drag and drop it down there. As I picked up a
$20 donation to the Club, I assumed that it must have been “Nobody”
and left for home.
“Suddenly…”
Monday morning is usually the time for the phone calls to begin. On a
recent Monday, the caller sheepishly states that “suddenly I can’t
access the Internet.” I recognized that the person speaking to me is
the same one whose 18 year old granddaughter had placed hundreds of
malware programs on his laptop two weeks before. At that time I had
suggested a router/firewall so that she could plug her laptop directly
to the router with Internet access. He had immediately gone out and
purchased and installed one. Oh yes, the granddaughter had been there
over the weekend and had brought her own laptop computer.
The blue Miata once again headed up the hill (from our home in the
Valley View Village all destinations seem to be “up the hill.”) to
their home in Arroyo Vista Village. In just a few minutes, I found
that the dear child didn’t plug the cable into the router as
instructed, but had used grandpa’s computer. Since she was an AOL
user, she attempted to change Gramps’ Accounts from Cox Cable to AOL
dialup and failed. It would have been so easy for her to have just
gone to AOL using Internet Explorer. She left for school Sunday
evening and didn’t mention a thing to Gramps. That way, she didn’t
have to tell on either “Ida Know” or “Not Me.” I picked up the $20
donation to the club and was soon on my way.
An admonition: Set up a Guest Account without Administrative rights.
Place a User name and password on the Administrative (your’s) account.
“All of a Sudden…”
“All of a sudden” turns up many times a month and in some unusual
situations. Last week, I received a call from a member that was using
Microsoft Office Outlook. It seems that she had been entering
information into a new contact when “all of a sudden” she couldn’t
enter information. She explained that she had been using Outlook and
contacts for years and had never had this problem. Since this didn’t
seem (to me) that this required immediate attention, I arranged an
appointment for the next morning. My Miata and I arrived at her Golf
Mesa Village home just as the Grandfather clock guarding the entry was
announcing that it was 10:00. Grandfather clocks that I am aware of
don’t announce “a.m.” or “p.m.”
She met me at the door and we proceeded to the office and she took her
place in front of her computer to show me what was happening. She
began keying in the house number, using the numeric key pad and just
as she had said, nothing worked as expected. I immediately saw why
this had happened so “suddenly.” Apparently “Nobody” had pressed the
Num Lock key thereby turning it off. So as she would enter a house
number, things went wild as the 2,4, 6, and 8 keys acted as direction
keys, 7 & 9 were Home and Page Up respectively and 1 & 3 were End and
Page down. I asked her to press the Num Lock key and “all of a sudden”
the problem was resolved. I collected the $20 donation check to the
club and was homeward bound — downhill of course.
“Suddenly…”
On another Monday, I received a call from a member stating that she
had recently upgraded to MS Office 2003 and a short time later,
suddenly she could no longer access MS Publisher files. This was the
result of someone else messing with functions that they should have
stayed away from. Support teams at Norton will vow “Not me.” But when
the lady was directed to an article titled “How to use Office programs
with the Norton Anti-Virus Office plug-in” she was able to resolve the
problem as I watched. This article can help you extricate yourself and
may be found at:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/329820/en-us
It is maddening to think that one, nay thousands upon thousands, must
jump through hoops because a bunch of programmers at Symantec (Norton)
can’t get it right.
I have never understood their automatic plug-in installation. At least
they should tell the user, including a list of possible problems and
their resolution, and let them make a decision as to whether to
install the plug in. Who needs viruses when “reputable” software
manufacturers can do things like this to you?
A long time ago, in computer time, but actually just over a year ago,
I stopped paying the extortion money for antivirus software and have
used the free AVG antivirus, which is available from
http://free.grisoft.com/doc/1
“Suddenly...”
“Suddenly” you can’t open Word or most other Microsoft Office
products. This happened because you owned a Hewlett Packard
multi-function printer with a flash memory card reader. It seems that
a security update messed with the logic for these systems and caused
much havoc around the world. A follow-on update was released to
affected computers during the 4th week in April. If you are still
having the problem, go to Start then Windows Update, download and
install all Critical updates. It seems that “Ida Know” visited
Microsoft’s Redmond campus…
Suddenly…”
Last week, one of your neighbors in the Valley View Village went to
his neighbors stating that his phone went “dead.” On investigation, it
was learned that he had ordered and installed a new Voice over
Internet Protocol (VoIP) phone system. Some of the equipment had
arrived, but due to a transposition of digits when entering the credit
card number, the important “Silver” box did not get shipped. “Ida
Know” didn't know how the mix up occurred. “Who Knows” stated that the
customer probably discarded the silver box with the packaging.
However, the land line telephone provider had been notified to
discontinue the service. “Dead line!”
An admonition: Always check the contents of packages to make certain
that all components are included before installing anything!
The Federal Communications Commission has a web site that explains
most aspects of VoIP:
http://www.fcc.gov/voip/
Not so “Suddenly…”
This particular call arrived on a Tuesday, so I was surprised to hear:
“Suddenly I can send e-mail but I can’t receive any messages.
Everything times out. I’ve called Cox Communications and since I use
Office Outlook 2003, they weren’t much help.” This phone call came in
at a time that Vickie was out and wouldn’t return for a while, so I
slid behind the wheel of the Miata and headed for Ridgecrest Village
to see what had happened so “suddenly.”
It took several minutes of attempting to send messages to the owner’s
e-mail address. Sure enough the message would be sent, but no incoming
messages. After some time it would all time out. The first inbound
message would never arrive. I found that there was no Internet access
using Internet Explorer. I installed Firefox from my USB Flash memory
and was then able to access the internet. At this time clues began to
appear one-by-one.
Norton Internet Security was warning of Firefox accessing the Internet
— twice!
ZoneAlarm was warning of Firefox accessing the Internet!
Oops! Only one program firewall at a time is allowed. Since the
member’s Norton subscription was about to expire, I downloaded AVG
antivirus to his desktop free at
http://free.grisoft.com , shut off the cable modem, went to
uninstall Norton SystemWorks and discovered two versions. I
uninstalled both. When I attempted to install AVG antivirus, the
program indicated that the version of the Roxio CD creator contained
code that was incompatible with AVG, and it provided a link for an
update. I installed the update and then successfully installed the AVG
antivirus. Then I turned on the cable modem and downloaded updates. I
was grateful to the AVG programmers to make that test and inform the
user. Suddenly, I decided that I like the AVG antivirus program and
its creators even more than in the past.
Now I felt that I could address the original problem. I opened Office
Outlook, and it proceeded to download a monstrous movie clip — 9.87MB!
It was able to complete the download due to the fact that Norton
wasn’t scanning inbound e-mail messages.
“Suddenly” wasn’t really all that sudden. The second and third
firewall programs were installed over a period of time, but the
problem didn’t manifest itself until the arrival of the large file. As
an aside, it was a clip from a newscast relating the story of an
autistic youth that had been the go-fer for a high school basketball
team. On the last game of his senior year, the coach (dad) suited him
up put him in to play. I believe that I saw through the tears that
welled up in my eyes over 21 points racked up — all three pointers.
I’m not a sports fan, but am a fan of the underdog! $20 more for the
Club’s treasury.
This article was originally published in Bits, PCs & Macs. Bits PCs &
Macs is the newsletter of the Sun City Anthem Computer Club. All
copies are available online at:
http://www.myscacc.org/newsletters.htm
There is no restriction against any non-profit group using this
article as long as it is kept in context with proper credit given the
author. The Editorial Committee of the Association of Personal
Computer User Groups (APCUG), an international organization of which
this group is a member, brings this article to you.
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