Learning IT

Need help in the world of technology? Here is the section for you, or talk about your favourite tech related topic, or what is new in the world of tech here.
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froggyboy604
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Re: Learning IT

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I feel it could be the regretful for learning Windows Vista courses and certs because Vista never became very popular.
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Skeithex
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Re: Learning IT

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Vista was still more used than W8, but for some, learning XP could still be helpful.
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froggyboy604
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Re: Learning IT

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Learning XP could still be useful for users who work at a tech and office job at a bank, school, and library which used XP until Windows 7 or 10 came out.

Windows Vista Home Premium was a flashy looking Operating system which attracted many users with its visual effects and built-in features like Windows Media Center which can play DVD disc movies, and DirectX10 which is needed to play newer PC games which need DirectX10.

I think a lot of PC users bought $200 Windows Vista Intel Celeron Desktop PC made by eMachine and similar budget brands. Those $200 to $300 Vista Desktop PC which can be more useful than slower $200 Windows XP Intel Atom Netbook laptops which sometimes cost more, and do not have a dvd-rom burner drive. A lot of people used to buy physical dvd movies, and physical PC games like Starcraft, and burned music, video, and picture files to DVD-R. I think a lot of cheap Windows Desktop PC came with a DVD writer/burner drive.

Windows Vista came pre-installed with Windows Defender, UAC/User Account Control,and Parental Controls,etc so it is secure than XP.

Some $200 Windows Vista Desktop PC's motherboard allow parts upgrade like upgrading to a maximum 2GB to 4GB of RAM, plugging in another SATA hard drive to increase the storage space, and installing a dedicated lower power PCI-Express video card without upgrading the power supply and cooling system on the PC. Installing a few upgrades like more RAM and a low power video card can help with making their Vista PC good enough to play some free PC games and 3D web browser flash games.
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Skeithex
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Re: Learning IT

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oh man, emachine was my first pc with Vista on it, didn't realize it sucked but I still greatly enjoyed it. Still wish it was around.
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Re: Learning IT

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I remember reading posts online that said eMachine were durable, and did not cost as much money as other computer brands.
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Re: Learning IT

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Mine did hold up well, but the fan did give out and it overheated ruining some things, but any PC can do that.
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Re: Learning IT

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I heard the fans on desktop PC do eventually die after years of being used for 5 or more hours a day, and I think the power supply fan power cables or the motherboard fan power port can go bad which cuts the power to the fan.
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