NO -- NOT WINDEX!! Takes away clarity & luster.
From epinions.com:
"Materials Needed
1) Soft, static-free cloth
2) Rubbing alcohol (or warm water, see below)
Procedure
First, dab your static-free soft cloth with the rubbing alcohol. Do not spray the cleaner directly on the screen, because there is a high risk of the liquid getting into the inner workings of the machine. Remember that your screen is about an inch away from your processor, and these PCs are far from waterproof. Wipe the screen with the static-free cloth. Any streaks left by the rubbing alcohol should quickly evaporate.
Cleaning Agent Tips
Never use Windex on a laptop display, because it can take away the clarity and lustre of the plastic top layer of the screen -- and you want to remove smudges, not make new ones, right? And by the way, if your problem has not become too significant, try to use water instead of alcohol. While I have not had problems myself, I understand overuse of alcohol as a solvant can make the plastic film brittle.
(By the way, PDA users: follow this same procedure when cleaning up your treasured Palms, Visors and Jornadas!) "
2006-09-26 10:10:31
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answer #1
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answered by Yahzmin ♥♥ 4ever 7
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I have an HP Pavalion d6000 laptop, one time my exhibit went black too. at the same time as you've been playing a media report the batteries probable ran out and the computing gadget changed into making waiting to hibernate/standby.
2016-11-24 20:52:35
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answer #2
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answered by thweatt 4
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i bought some wiping cloths from walmart the other day (they were in the electronics dept). they are like moist towelettes but are supposed to keep the static (electricity) from harming the electronics. the first ingredient on the towels is water not alcohol or ammonia. they work fine on my screen, tv etc.
2006-09-26 10:14:55
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Windex.
Spray it on the paper towel - not the computer.
2006-09-26 10:07:13
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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