Computer Science, asked by sudha21527, 7 months ago

a.
1.
3.
Worksheet 3 State whether these statements are 'True' or 'False'.
MS Windows is an operating system software.
2.
In Windows 7, files and folders are represented by similar icons.
When we delete a file icon, actual file does not get deleted.
4. Recycle bin stores items you delete from the computer.
5.
The change name option helps us to change the name of an icon.
The desktop background is also known as the screen saver.
7.
Folders can be used to arrange the files neatly.
6.​

Answers

Answered by vishakha0987
1

Answer:

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Windows 7: The Missing Manual by David Pogue

Chapter 1. Getting Started, Desktop, & Start Menu

Microsoft wants to make one thing perfectly clear: Compared with Windows XP, Windows 7 isn’t just a whole new ball game—it’s practically a different sport. It’s different on the surface, under the hood, and everywhere in between. (It’s so different, in fact, that this book includes an appendix called Appendix C which lets you look up a familiar Windows landmark and figure out where Microsoft stuck it in Windows 7.)

If you’re moving to Windows 7 from Vista, well, your new world won’t be quite as much of a shock. But the landscape still has shifted quite a bit.

Either way, it’s hard to predict exactly what you’ll see at the fateful moment when the Windows 7 screen first lights up on your monitor. You may see a big welcome screen bearing the logo of Dell or whomever; it may be the Windows 7 Setup Wizard (Appendix A); or it may be the login screen, where you’re asked to sign in by clicking your name in a list. (Skip to Logging On for details on logging in.)

The best place to start, though, might be the shining majesty of the Getting Started window shown in Figure 1-1. If it doesn’t open automatically, choose Start→Getting Started.

Getting Started

All Versions

Getting Started is supposed to be an antidote to the moment of dizzy disorientation you’d otherwise feel the first time you fired up Windows 7. It’s basically a window full of links to useful places in the Windows empire. What’s confusing is that just clicking one of these promising-looking buttons (“Back up your files”? Hey, yeah!) doesn’t actually do anything except change the billboard in the top part of the window. You have to double-click to open up the control panel or program you need to make changes.

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