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Windows 7 : Gadgets and Other Supplied Accessories - Exploring the Other Accessories (part 1)

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1/13/2013 9:20:17 AM
As you likely already know from using Windows in the past, a number of other freebie accessories come with Windows. Some are useful and some end up lying fallow for many PC users who never even know they exist. These little apps have been carried forward from generations of Windows going back to when I started writing about it with Windows 3.0. Because they are so well known by this point, we won’t tie up book pages here with the detailed descriptions used in our past books. It will suffice here to briefly tell you what each does. Some of them, such as Calculator, Paint, and WordPad, deserve extra merit here because they were seriously updated for Windows 7.

The following sections provide a brief rundown of each program.

Narrator

This is an Accessibility tool that helps the visually impaired read text on the screen, because the computer reads aloud to you, in a synthesized voice. Obviously, you need speakers or a headset to hear this. Run Narrator by typing narr at the Start menu and clicking Narrator. Be careful, because the program will describe every item on the screen, and say the name of every key you press. Fine-tune the categories of events and text that this utility reads aloud via the Preferences menu.

Magnifier

This is an Accessibility tool that helps the visually impaired see a selected portion of the screen or all of the screen better by increasing the size of text and graphics. Simply press the Windows key (or click the Start button) and type mag and you will see the application name pop up. Click it. A small application window will appear, as shown in Figure 1.

Figure 1. The Magnifier application window is very tiny. From here, adjust settings as desired to magnify a portion of the screen or the entire screen, and set the magnification level. You can also choose how the magnification “lens” follows the mouse movements and text cursor.


There are two modes of operation: Full Screen and Lens. The first magnifies the whole screen, and the screen will pan and scan as you move the mouse beyond the edge of the screen. Lens mode will enlarge only the screen area under the mouse as it moves. See Figure 2 for an example. We have turned on the Color Inversion option in the Options dialog box for this effect.

Figure 2. The Magnifier in Lens mode with Color Inversion turned on.

In Lens mode, there is a magnifying glass icon on the screen. Mousing over that will reveal a >> symbol. Click that to reveal the Magnifier window again in order to increase or decrease magnification with the + and − buttons. Click the gear icon to set options. Options include specifying the size of the lens (in height and width) and setting the multiplier for magnification when you click the + or − button. A nice feature for typists is that the magnifier lens can be set to follow the text insertion point.

Tip

With the advent of the little-screened “netbooks” that have become increasingly popular, Magnifier is a timely tool. Screens on netbooks are very small and often sport high resolution (translate: everything on the screen is miniscule!). Everyone who uses a netbook can potentially benefit from using this tool.


XPS Viewer

There are some compelling pros and cons in the debate about whether XPS may actually stand a chance against PDF, and why. Probably the most convincing hatch mark in the pro-XPS column is that XPS is becoming increasingly integrated into the PC operating system that sits on 90% of the world’s business desktops. XPS format is in its infancy compared to the much more mature PDF, but on the other hand, unlike so many of Microsoft’s moves to create proprietary formats, XPS is an open format. (PDF is also an open format at this point, although many people are under the misconception that PDF is a proprietary Adobe format.) This should assist XPS in getting a toehold in the otherwise PDF-dominated world of portable documents.

What this means is that you can simply print a document to the Microsoft XPS Document Writer and name the output file. You can then email or otherwise send that file to other computers or users who have the XPS Viewer installed (for XP users it is a download). In Vista, you were able to view XPS documents either in a viewer that was hosted within Internet Explorer 7 or in the supplied XPS Viewer. In Windows 7 the same is true except that the XPS Viewer has been updated. Not as sophisticated as Adobe Reader or Acrobat by far, the XPS Viewer in Windows 7 only allows you to search an XPS document for a word or phrase, zoom in and out, digitally sign documents, and set document permissions. Adobe isn’t quaking in its boots yet, but it took over a decade for PDF to mature, so XPS has some catching up to do.

To run the XPS Viewer, click the Start button and type XPS. You should see it listed. Alternatively, click All Programs and click XPS Viewer. Of course, because of the file association set up for XPS files, clicking one will open the document in the XPS Viewer. Trying to digitally sign a document will fail unless you own a digital signature. Choose Permissions, Set Permissions, and this will lead you to Windows Live ID and the Windows Rights Management Wizard, where you can sign up for one. This will activate your machine. You can then specify permissions for the file. If you are a viewer of the document, you can see what permissions you have been granted.

Calculator

Up until Windows Vista, Calculator was a quick-and-dirty onscreen version of two traditional pocket calculators: a standard no-brainer calculator (Standard mode) and a more complex scientific calculator (Scientific mode) used by statisticians, engineers, computer programmers, and business professionals. These two modes were good for calculating your lunch bill, a list of inventory items, or the mortgage payment on your office building, but neither sported a running tape that you could use to backtrack through your calculations. Now, in the new version of Calculator that is completely updated for Windows 7, there are additional modes, views, and options. While most users will only require standard calculations, there is the previously available Scientific mode as well as a Statistics mode and a Programmer mode. Calculator will also do unit conversions for you—both date conversions and measurement conversions. For example, you can enter two dates and the application will calculate the number of years, months, weeks, and days between them. Unit conversion is extensive, including options for angle, energy, length, power, pressure, temperature, time, velocity, volume, and weight. Each of these categories has between 5 and 14 different target conversion units. For example, you can convert between foot-pounds/min to watts.

One of the best features of the new Calculator is that it has a larger screen that displays the history of calculi and lets you clear as well as edit them. We have all waited a long time for this. How many times have you been adding a list of numbers and wondered if you made an error in entry? One of the best features of the running “tape” is that you can backtrack and edit your entries after the fact by double-clicking that entry’s line on the tape. If you do so, the application will display the original calculation result and the altered result when you press Enter, so you can easily compare them.

Finally, there is a Template mode that offers three calculation templates: Gas Mileage, Lease Estimation, and Mortgage Estimation. Plug in a few variables and click Calculate and you have your result. For example, provide the values for distance and fuel consumption, and your miles per gallon is calculated. With Lease Estimation things are pretty much the same, only there are more fields to fill in: lease value, period of time, number of payments per year, residual value, interest rate, and periodic payment. The same principle applies for Wage and Mortgage Estimation. Figures 3 and 4 show examples of two Calculator modes and templates.

Figure 3. Calculator in Programmer mode with the Template set to Length conversion.

Figure 4. Calculator in Scientific mode and Template set to Mortgage Estimation. Notice the running “tape” in the left pane. Double-clicking an entry allows you to edit an entry to correct it or to do a “what if?” adjustment without reentering everything.
 
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