Right click the link and choose open in new window.
2006-07-21 05:06:24
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answer #1
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answered by Duds331 5
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with internet explorer hold down the shift key when you click on links to open them in a new browser window
click on help in internet explorer and search the help index for keyboard shortcuts
â
â
LEARN COMPUTER BASICS â
â
â You should have read a great book called "Windows XP For Dummies" (no I'm not calling you a dummy) like I did when I first started. Except back then it was called "Windows 95 For Dummies". Trust me it's a great book and has lots of humor in it as well. There are two of them. You should get both of them. Each one has information the other doesn't have.
â Wouldn't it be a great feeling knowing that you will be able to do many things your friends cannot do? A little work now will save you tens of thousands of hours of doing unnecessary and repetitive tasks later. When most newcomers get on the World Wide Web they are in a really big hurry. Then they end up in chat rooms and forums wanting people like myself to explain it step-by-step. Read this book first. Then come back if you are still having a problem.
â Don't read this book from cover-to-cover. Instead use it as a reference book. Keep it open while experimenting with your computer. Click on every thing you see with both your right and left mouse button. Also experiment with the center mouse wheel. There are many things it can do.
â This book will teach you how to do many many things with your computer. Some of them are copy, paste, delete, highlighting text, making a file, saving a file, how to change things in your computer, how to install software and the list goes on and on. Getting on the web before you learn the basics of your computer is like trying to be a race car driver before you learn how to drive.
â Look for this book at your local public library. If they don't have it have them use their username and password to login to firstsearch.org where they can get any book from any library in the world. Only libraries can get an account at Firstsearch.org. So you need to go to the library to search it. When you find what you want have the librarian order it for you. Read it and then return it to them. :)
2006-07-21 05:13:34
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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You may want to consider using Mozilla's Firefox for web browsing. It allows "tabbed" browsing or more than one internet page open at a time. You are permitted to open any links in a separate tab. Thus, you don't lose your place.
http://www.mozilla.com/
... remember that right click is your friend
2006-07-21 05:09:29
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answer #3
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answered by nobody 5
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Use the Mozilla Firefox browser. You can right click on a link and select Open in new Tab. Then it opens in the same window, but you have multiple tabs, one with your original page on it. You can get it at http://www.mozilla.com
2006-07-21 05:06:55
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Okay, open two window explorer windows. Right click down to your task/toolbar and click Tile Windows Vertically or Horizontally. This is very helpful when you're doing research.
2006-07-21 05:24:33
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answer #5
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answered by danny c 2
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You can open yahoo mail two times by clicking on it two times. This will open and allow you to have it up two times. It works for me anyway. Good luck.
2006-07-21 05:14:10
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answer #6
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answered by COCO 1
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right click the link and pick open in new window!
2006-07-21 05:06:25
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answer #7
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answered by Interested Dude 7
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click your explorer icon
2006-07-21 05:06:22
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answer #8
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answered by worldstiti 7
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