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Maximize Screen: This
program is designed to occupy the full screen on most computers. If this program is not
already occupying your full screen, click on the maximize screen button, which in most
systems is found in the upper right corner of your screen.
If you are viewing this program within
another program that has a contents or navigation frame on the left side of the screen,
the border that separates that frame from this program may be adjustable. Click on the
border line. If arrows appear, you may drag the border to the left to allow more space for
this program.
Adjust Type Size: The size
of the type that you see depends, in large measure, on the screen resolution setting in
your computer's control panel. Your browser also allows you to change the size of type. In
Netscape Navigator 3, go to the Options menu, select General Preferences, and then click
the Fonts button. In Netscape Navigator 4, go to the Edit menu, select Preferences, then
click on Fonts.
In Microsoft Internet Explorer, you can
change the size of the font by clicking on Font in the toolbar.
Load Images: Netscape
Navigator offers the option of having images (graphics) load automatically or only upon
request. Some elements of the MSR program require that images be loaded. (Some Internet
users do not want images to load automatically. They slow down the transmittal of text,
especially when information is transmitted from the Internet via modem. To change the
setting that determines whether images load automatically, go to the Netscape Options
menu.)
Browser Toolbars: To
increase usable screen size, you may wish to hide unused toolbars from the top or bottom
of your browser screen. In Netscape 3, for example, the Directory Buttons can be
deactivated in the Options menu. Netscape 4 uses different terms for the same thing. Go to
the View menu and select Hide Personal Toolbar.
Frames: A few screens in
this program are divided into two or three sections called "frames." The MSR
requires a browser that reads frames, such as Netscape Navigator 2.0 or better or
Microsoft Internet Explorer 3.0 or better. If your browser cannot read frames, you will be
unable to use the Know-It-All's Security Quiz. Consider updating your browser.
Blue Text: The MSR uses hypertext, a
point-and-click system for navigating rapidly through a large web of interrelated
information. Underlined blue text (or underlined white text on a blue background)
indicates a link to a related topic. Move the cursor to the underlined blue text. As the
cursor passes over the blue text, the cursor icon changes to a hand with a pointed finger.
With the pointed finger on the underlined text, a single click with the left mouse button
activates the link and brings the other topic to the screen.
Table of Contents: Each
major module has a table of contents. Topics in a table of contents are in underlined blue
text, which means they are linked to the text that covers that topic. Clicking in the
table of contents is one means of navigating through the MSR web.
Scroll Bar: The scroll bar at the
right side of your screen may be used to scroll through any single page (file). Click on
the arrow at the bottom of the scroll bar to view the part of the page that extends below
the screen. Click on the up arrow to move back up. The quickest way to scroll down to the
navigation buttons at the bottom of each page is to press and hold the Page Down key on
the keyboard, rather than using the scroll bar.
Back/Browser Toolbar: A click on the
Back button in the browser toolbar takes you back to the previously viewed location. With repeated clicks on Back, you continue moving back to retrace your
steps. However, this Back button is not always predictable. If you have been moving
around within a single file or document, the browser Back button may take you back to the
previously viewed document, rather than to the previous location within the same document.
Back/Right Mouse
Button: Netscape and Internet Explorer starting with version 4.0 have an
additional and often better way of returning to your previous location. A single click
with the right mouse button brings up a dialog box with a choice of
moving back or forward. Clicking the right mouse button on Back returns
you to your previous location. This is more predictable than the Back button on the
browser toolbar.
Navigational Buttons: Navigational
buttons are located at the bottom of each page. A single click with the left mouse
button on the appropriate navigational button takes the user to the specified
location. To move quickly to the navigation buttons at the bottom of the page, press and
hold the Page Down key on the keyboard. This is usually faster than using the scroll
bar.
To select and copy text, hold down the left
mouse button and drag the cursor across the desired text. Then click on copy in the
browser Edit menu. The text may then be pasted into any word processing program.
To print, click on Print in the browser tool
bar, or select Print from the browser Edit menu. You will see a Print Dialog Box that
enables you to choose a printer, determine number of copies, and define a print range
either all the file or only selected pages. You do not have the option you would
find in a word processing program of printing only a portion of text that you have
selected or highlighted.
If you print all the file, you can check what
text will appear in your printout by using the scroll bar. Any part of the document that
you can scroll to will be included in the printout.
You may create a shortcut for returning to a
major topic area that you refer to frequently. While in the topic, go to the Bookmarks
menu in Netscape Navigator or the Favorites menu in Microsoft Internet Explorer. In
Netscape Navigator, select Add Bookmark in this menu. In Internet Explorer, select Add to
Favorites. To return to that topic the next time you use the MSR, go to the same menu and
select the topic.
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