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Computer Training Atlanta GA

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Computer Training. You will find informative articles about Computer Training, including "How To Reduce Home Computer Dangers", "Quick Stops and Restarts For Your Computer", and "How To Avoid Deleting Stuff You Didn't Want To Delete". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Atlanta, GA that can help answer your questions about Computer Training.


Manpower - Branch Offices- Downtown Buckhead
(404)724-4865
1355 Peachtree Street Northeast Suite 108
Atlanta, GA
Exact Accounting Services Inc
(770)475-6302
11670 Windbrooke Way
Atlanta, GA
Nanosecond Computers
(404)874-9664
1055 Fairburn Rd Sw
Atlanta, GA
New Horizons Computer Learning Centers
(770)270-2327
4053 La Vista Road
Atlanta, GA
Questech Communications
(678)344-5240
4814 Stone Mountain Highway South
Atlanta, GA
Georgia Tech
(404)385-0703
1197 Peachtree Street Northeast
Atlanta, GA
ITEK Networks Inc
(404)577-1126
17 Simpson Street Northwest
Atlanta, GA
Guru Software Services
(770)569-1899
105 Nobel Court
Atlanta, GA
Crash Course Computing
(404)234-5025
2657 Lenox Rd Ne #12 #12
Atlanta, GA
Davismediagroup- The
(404)822-7210
3400 Garson Drive Northeast
Atlanta, GA

How To Reduce Home Computer Dangers

If you think your home-based personal computer or computer network is invulnerable to "W32/SirCam@MM," "Code Red," and other computer nasties that recently have mounting digital attacks from cyberspace, think again: There is no such thing as perfect computer security.

Hackers, crackers, or computer intruders by any name could care less that your computer at home is used only for such mundane tasks as storing recipes or creating shopping lists.

Digital bad guys may want to gain control of your computer to launch attacks and wreak havoc on other computer systems.

Chances are, however, some personal, private and sensitive information dwells in the electronic crevices of your hard drive and you don't want strangers examining your personal data. More and more home-based computers also access the Internet via broadband technology that makes your computer or home network more vulnerable to break-ins.

With control of your computer, the silicon sneaks can hide their true identity and location as they watch your computer actions, destroy your data or launch attacks elsewhere.

Your are particularly vulnerable if you connect to the Internet, run programs of unknown origin and don't take adequate precautions, says the Pittsburgh, PA-based Computer Emergency Response Team Coordination Center, officially known as CERT/CC .

The center is the software security branch of the Software Engineering Institute (SEI) , a U.S. Department of Defense research and development center created to make the acquisition, development, and sustainment of software-intensive systems predictably better, faster, and cheaper.

CERT/CC also devotes a section to home computer users.

"Even if you have a computer connected to the Internet only to play the latest games or to send e-mail to friends and family, your computer may be a target," the center says.

"Intruders are always discovering new vulnerabilities (informally called "holes") to exploit in computer software. Most of the incident reports of computer break-ins received at the CERT/CC could have been prevented if system administrators and users kept their computers up-to-date with patches and security fixes," the center says.

CERT/CC offers the following recommendations for home computer users.

Consult with your employer's computer system support center if you work from home and connect to your employer's network. Your employer may have policies or procedures relating to the security of your home network.

Use virus protection software and keep it up to date.

Use a firewall. Hardware and software based firewalls can provide some degree of protection against attack. Don't install a firewall and neglect to follow other security measures.

Do not open unknown e-mail attachments. E-mail attachments are often the deployment tool of choice among attackers. It is not enough to know the e-mail originated from an address you recognize. Many viruses spread because they arrive via familiar addresses. If you must open...

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How To Avoid Deleting Stuff You Didn't Want To Delete

by Bill Koelzer

How many times have you highlighted something, then hit the "delete" key, and immediately realized that you’d deleted the wrong thing. It’s sort of like that one-second feeling you get when you know you have just hit your thumb with the hammer, but the pain has not yet kicked in.

Here’s how to never again lose anything that you delete---and always get it back.

To practice this method, first, highlight a few words in a Word document or in an outgoing email message. After you’ve highlighted the word, put your cursor cursor over the darkened part and right-click the mouse. The drop down menu offers noO choice of “Delete.” Instead, it offers “Cut.”

In the old days of pasting-up paper pages and metallic documents before they were set into columns or lead type, when you “cut something out” you actually cut it out and you set it aside. The beauty of this was that you could always grab the piece of paper or lead type later and pop it back in if you wanted.

Then came computers with that deadly delete key, that devil of finality. You’d delete something, and man, it was gone for good. Users hated that, so software programs began including an “un-do” button, which un-does a recent action that you have taken. The same programs also have a re-do button, which can re-do and un-do. (Pay attention, dahlings!)

Using Microsoft Word

If you are typing something in Microsoft Word, you will see on its standard toolbar atop the page two bent arrows. Click the arrow pointing left and you can un-do your most recent action. Keep clicking it to un-do more than one recent action. If you decide later that you didn’t want to un-do something, just click on the re-do arrow and the un-did comes back. (Hmmmm, do Vampire Computers have an “un-dead” button?)

Click on the little down arrow in between the two arrows, and you can see a list of the most recent actions that you can undo; scroll down to see many more. However, use care---when you un-do an action from this menu, you also un-do all actions above it in the list. But then that’s what re-do is for, isn’t it?

Using e-mail

Your email window in Outlook Express and Outlook email programs, both have buttons for un-do, but only Outlook has one for re-do. Outlook has a “cut” button and a delete button, whereas Outlook Express has only a “cut” button.

In both email programs, the “cut” button has an image of a pair of scissors on it. Of course you can always highlight some part of an outgoing email message and use the delete key to delete it forever, but we suggest that you ALWAYS mentally keep “cut” as your default thingy to get rid of stuff.

Why? Well, because “cut” is so incredibly cool and slick that it KEEPS the last thing that you cut, safe and sound right on your clipboard . Can you imagine how handy that is?

The clipboard is ...

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Quick Stops and Restarts For Your Computer

by Stephen Canale

If you're having trouble shutting your system down because it either takes too long or because your computer freezes, then EndItAll will save you from this hassle.

If your computer won't shut down properly, it's usually a problem with a software drivers that won't properly close, and it's almost impossible to diagnose which drivers are causing the problems! However, a simple utility called EndItAll has been produced by PC Magazine and can be downloaded for free from their web site. EndItAll will efficiently close all of the programs that you're system is running in the background.

I personally run this utility just prior to turning my system off, and it's been flawless in its execution. Since I began using EndItAll I've been able to property shut down my computer 100% of the time.

While you can theoretically close software drivers buy pressing the CTRL ALT and DEL keys simultaneously and then choosing specific drivers one at a time, and then applying the "End Task" button, this takes a great deal of time. Additionally, this manual method of closing down programs has not freed me from system lock-ups, while EndItAll has.

Why does using EndItAll close these drivers more successfully than using CTRL ALT DEL? I have absolutely no idea, but it does!

Quicker Restarts

While we're on the subject of turning computers off, let's acknowledge that often you don't really want to shut down, as much as you need to restart.

When your computer starts to slow d...

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