The "Freeola Customer Forum" forum, which includes Retro Game Reviews, has been archived and is now read-only. You cannot post here or create a new thread or review on this forum.
So, does anyone know any good survival tips or good pick-me-ups (legal ones please :P) to get me through the next 6 weeks?
Cheers. :)
Cartman never tells the truth, therefore it must be Kyle.
> Icarus. I use the PC to play games and abuse you over the internet. I
> don't know how to edit the paramaters of Microsoft Word. This may
> surprise you but not everybody designs programmes in their spare
> time.
But Word has nothing to do with designing programs; sure you can write code in them, but you'd be a fool to do that (unless it was HTML, but then you'd still be a fool).
And it might prove useful in later life.
> Ms NY, do I have to explain it to you?
Haha.. please!
> And no I will not say, you must learn. Though here is some info that
> might help:
>
>
> Kyle, Stan, and Cartman were rounded up yesterday, because one of
> them was suspected of having grabbed a few too many cookies from the
> cookie jar. The three friends made the following statements under
> very intensive questioning:
>
> Kyle: I'm innocent
> Stan: I'm innocent
> Cartman: Stan is the guilty one
>
>
> If only one of these statements was true, who took the cookies?
Kyle
OK, OK no more riddles.
Still, you might want to know that:
Microsoft Word is an extremely functional Word processor, as we all know, and it might not surprise
you to find that there are options available that extend the functionality. Passing command line switches
via the shortcut or command prompt allow you to control how Word starts up. Some of these are of great
value in troubleshooting launch problems because you can effectively disable features that might be the
culprit. Check 'em out (sans quotes): "/a" Prevents add-ins and global templates from being loaded
automatically; "/m" Disables AutoExec macros during startup; "/n" Starts Word without creating a new
document, as it normally would; "/w" Starts a new instance of Word that runs in a separate process from
existing Word sessions; "/c" Launches Word, then invokes NetMeeting; and "/q" Starts Word without
displaying the splash screen. Again, just add these switches (one or more) to the end of your Word
shortcut(s) without the quotes. I suppose you could even make several different shortcuts to Word,
depending on how you wanted it to launch at the time.