IE is almost the first choice browser for all rookies and big shrimps when surfing the Internet. I believe you are already familiar with its regular usage skills. However, the author always believes that as long as you are careful and careful enough, you will continue to "explore" new IE usage skills. If you don’t believe it, let’s take a look at the following fresh usages. I believe it will make you feel refreshed!
1. Find the lost IE start button
Under normal circumstances, the IE browser's quick start button will "set up" in the system taskbar, but if you are not careful in operation, it will often cause the IE browser's quick start button to "disappear" in the taskbar. So when you face the IE startup button disappears from the system taskbar, how should you find it back? In fact, the method is very simple, just follow the steps below to operate.
First, right-click the IE browser icon in the desktop and execute the "Create Shortcut" command from the pop-up shortcut menu, so that you can create a corresponding shortcut for the IE browser.
Then open the system resource management window, and double-click the "Windows" folder, "Application Data" folder, "Microsoft" folder, "Internet Explorer" folder, and "Quick Launch" folder in the C drive; then drag the created IE shortcut in the desktop directly into the "Quick Launch" folder window.
Of course, there is a simpler method, which is to directly drag the IE browser icon in the system desktop and use the left mouse button to the system taskbar. However, when dragging and dropping, you must only after the dotted icon appears.
2. Let IE also be able to continue transmission at breakpoints
As we all know, when clicking a download link address on the IE page, IE will automatically call its built-in download function to download the file; however, once this function encounters network blockage and is disconnected, all the downloaded content will be lost. You will need to start over when downloading again in the future. Obviously, the built-in download function of IE can easily delay download time.
So is there a way for IE's download function to support breakpoint continuous transmission? The answer is yes. As long as you use IE to download files and get accidentally dropped, or find that the IE download progress bar has no response for a long time, please do not click the "Cancel" button in the download dialog box, but should directly click the "x" button in the window to temporarily exit the download state; then click the download link address in the web page, and then click the "Save" button. In the pop-up save dialog box, set the file name and save path to the same file as the last time I did not download, so that IE can continue to download the remaining content; of course, this IE breakpoint continuous transmission function is only suitable for HTTP download, not FIP download.
3. Set IE options to "overhead"
If others are allowed to set IE's Internet access parameters at will, then the security of IE and even the security of the system will be threatened. For example, once an illegal user opens the "Internet Options" setting box of the IE browser and reduces the security level of the Internet, then various viruses and *s in the network may follow. To ensure security, you sometimes have to "abstract" the Internet options in the IE browser, so that illegal users cannot set IE Internet access parameters by themselves:
First, open the Explorer window of the Windows system, find and enter the "system32" folder window, select the "" file, and right-click it. From the right-click menu that pops up, click the "Rename" option, and change the file name of "" to "". Of course, you can also change it to another name, but you must remember the renamed file name, so that you can quickly find it when you need to restore it in the future. After completing the renaming operation and clicking the "Internet Options" command in IE browser, you cannot enter the option settings window.
4. Can fix IE without using tools
When surfing the Internet, IE will inevitably encounter malicious attacks; so how should you restore IE that has been maliciously modified? Most people will choose various professional IE repair tools to deal with IE malicious attacks; there are also higher-level "pigs" who can restore the original "face" of IE by manually modifying the registry. But when you don’t have professional IE repair tools to use, or you don’t have a deep understanding of the registry, how should you repair IE? To this end, this article provides you with a very convenient solution, but this method can only be suitable for Windows 2000 or Windows XP operating systems. The following are the specific implementation steps of this method:
Click the "Start"/"Settings"/"Control Panel" commands, then double-click the "Administrative Tools"/"Computer Management" icons, in the window that pops up, expand the "System Tools"/"Local Users and Groups" folder, then click the "User" option, in the corresponding right sub-window, right-click the blank area, execute the "New User" command in the shortcut menu, name the new user "newusr", and set the access password for the account;
After completing the creation task of a new user, click the "Start"/"Shut down" command, then execute the "Log out of Administrator" operation, and then use the "newusr" account to re-enter the Windows 2000 system; then open the system registry editing interface, expand the registry branch HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Internet Explorer, and turn "Internet Select the primary key of Explorer, and then click the "Registration"/"Export Registration File" command in the registry menu bar to export the registry branch content about the IE part, for example, save it as a "" file. In this way, you can export all the correct settings about IE under the "newusr" account; since the "newusr" account has just been newly created, the IE settings under the account are all the correct settings by the system by default, which means that it has not been attacked;
Next, cancel the "newusr" account, and then log in to the Windows 2000 system with the "Administrator" account; then open the registry editing window, execute the "Register"/"Import Registry File" commands in the menu bar in turn. In the pop-up file selection dialog box, import the "" file exported before to the registry, and then restore the original "look".