Where,did,that,toolbar,come,fr computer Where did that toolbar come from?
----------------------------------------------------------Permission is granted for the below article to forward,reprint, distribute, use for ezine, newsletter, website,offer as free bonus or part of a product for sale as longas no changes a Gone are those times when the companies and the organisations didn't need a hi-tech system to handle them. Owing to the considerable increase in the business sector and thus, an enormous increase in the complexity of the organisational struc
A common complaint from many users is that surfing theInternet takes so long loading pages. Gone are the days where the culprit was the slow Internetconnections. There are still manypossible reasons for being forced to wait on pages to load, and not all of themare under your control. However, acommon reason that you do have the ability to change is the number of toolbarsyou use in your Internet Browser. Whether you use Internet Explorer, Mozilla, or Chrome, if you dont payattention, you can find you have 3, 4, or more toolbars installed. Each of these will slow down everything youdo on the Internet by a little bit. Now,some toolbars are useful, so if you like a toolbar Im not saying you shouldremove it, but too much of a good thing rarely works out for anybody.Two topics to discuss with toolbars: How do I get rid of the ones I dont want?And how do I keep them from installing in the first place.When you are trying to get rid of unwanted toolbars, thereare two steps. Disable the toolbar, thenuninstall it completely. With InternetExplorer, you can disable toolbars, but opening up the Tools Menu, thenselecting Manage Add-Ons. Make sure thatyou have the Toolbars and Extentions option selected, then look through thelist of toolbars on the right-hand side. Select all of the toolbars you dont want to use, then click on theDisable button. The toolbar willdisappear immediately from your Internet Explorer windows. (Similar steps would also work in Chrome orMozilla, but I wont drag this out with too many details).Once youve disabled the toolbar, uninstalling it from yourcomputer would finish off the application completely. You will need to have local administrationrights to be able to do this step. Openup your Control Panel, then click on Add/Remove Programs (Windows XP) orPrograms and Features (Windows Vista/7). CAUTION: if you uninstall the wrong software here, something you do want to keepcould be uninstalled. Alwaysdouble-check what you are uninstalling before proceeding. After a brief wait, alist of all of the programs installed on your computer will show up. You can select the toolbar you want to removefrom that list, and click on Uninstall. Follow the prompts and when finished, the toolbar will be completelyremoved from your computer. You can repeat this for each toolbar you want toremove.Now that they are all gone, you need to learn a couple oftricks to not get them back. Manytoolbars are tied in with updates to other applications. For example, Google toolbar is offered everytime you update Adobe Reader, and Ask.coms toolbar currently wants to installwhen you update Java. Unless you uncheckthe install options they will automatically add themselves. Other toolbars will add themselves just becauseyou visited a website. These are usuallythe most dangerous, and are often associated with spyware. If you find a website that does this to yourcomputer, be very careful and consider whether you really need to access thatwebsite.One of the major keys to keeping your computer working is tominimize the number of things you ask it to do. Very rarely do I see somebody who actually uses more than 1 or maybe 2toolbars, but often they will have as many as 7 and they dont know where theycame from. Cleaning these unwantedtoolbars will unclutter your window and help pages to load faster, improvingyour experience while surfing the Internet.
Where,did,that,toolbar,come,fr