Lower left corner of your screen, near the start button. One little icon is for Leech FTP. Click it ONCE
There are three lower boxes. Box on the left will show which files are waiting to be uploaded AFTER you choose files to upload and give the command to upload. There are two ways to upload. When you highlight a file to upload, just right-click for a small and easy menu that offers you about six choices. At the top of this little menu
As tough as this sound to you, it is just as certain as sunshine can be.
100 percent of all humans who can read this document and click a mouse are
one-conditionally guaranteed to become Master of the Computer Program in one lesson.
For approximately eighty percent of the population, this mastery requires less than five minutes.
For twenty percent, people who pig=headedly refuse to just shut up and duplicate success remedies,
it can often take up to an hour. Generally, the fastest learners are under age nine and over seventy.
That has not changed, even once, in all these years of helping people to help themselves.
Consider it an absolute, and absolutes are sweet, because you can bet them profitably.
One delicious feature of sharing PowerGem information from MisterShortcut to you,
is the humanly immutable knowledge that no ten living humans of normal brain,
even when added together, carry more than the smallest fraction of info,
data and conclusions stored inside one human brain,
albeit one of erratic decision-making.
No one, by any stretch of the imagination, carries even a twentieth of the information stored inside that one mind, so each gem coming out is not the result of that one mind's brilliance, not by a long shot. It is the result of that one mind conglomerating and decocting the best information from truly brilliant minds, dozens and scores of them, hundreds adn finally thousands of them, appreciated one at a time and presented to the rest of the world is simplest fashions.
Even Einstein was carefully instructive in telling us that genius is no more or less than taking an infinite number of pains an infinite number of times, which is the fancy way of translating Henry Ford's description of success as being one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent perspiration, or MisterShortcut's, "Excellence cannot be repeated accidentally," or Erskine's "It's not the cards you're dealt, it's how you play them.
You might even know it as "The harder I work, the luckier I get." Not because of the hard work, not as much as the underlying energy of determination to eliminate the obstacles between you and whatever it is you're on fire to accomplish. He didn't think about cars for six point two hours per day and bicycle over to Starbucks to pay fifty-five times the cost of a cup of coffee. He ate, slept, and drank nothing but cars and engines until he was slapping those bad boys together with some help from the men and women who worked his assembly lines.
in that one incredibly abosrbent mind NOT blessed with photo-memory.
MAGICAL AMAZING SECRET OF COMPUTER PROGRAMS - designed for 8-12 year old children
If you have a program on your computer that you'd like to learn, there are huge shortcuts, so that you're guaranteed to be using the program and understanding it in less than five minutes, ten minutes for VERY fancy program.
1) Go the folder where the program is. If you don't know, use WIN + F to find it on your computer. When you find it, click it only once to highlight it (You're not going to open it yet, you're just going to go to where it is).
When you righ-click-it, you'll see a menu. One item is "OPEN CONTAINING FOLDER" That means exactly what it says. Just like a file cabinet, this opens the drawer that contains this file.
(BY THE WAY, the other way to get to it if you know the name of the program is to use WIN+E to open up a view of your entire filing cabinet. Click on Program Files and you should see a folder with the name of your program. Most programs install themselves to that folder, PROGRAM FILES, but not all of them. In that folder you will see a bunch of files. These files are related to the program you want to learn about, and only those. So if you see a README, go ahead and read it. Almost every README file you ever open is a brief explanation of what the program does.
Secondly, when you open a program you can almost always get a detailed help menu if you just push your F1 button. F1 is the universal command for opening up a HELP window. You do not need to know all of the functions of a program since you will not use them all. Just open a program and play. At the top of every program you're ever likely to open there is a menu bar, right. Look at the top of this window; there's a toolbar, right? Well, learn to just click on things. Open up the menu and play around. More than ninety-nine percent of the time you will have a working knowledge of the program within three to five minutes at the most.
Third and most magical of all computer program shortcuts and sweetheart arrangements is, of course, the play factor.
Having tested or repeatedly used no less than a thousand computer programs, nearly a hundred of them regularly, I can assure you that this trick works with one hundred percent of the people who try it. My oldest student was in her late seventies, an orthodox religious lady who felt she had to commit to writing the facts of her late father-in-law's life. It was striking to see her determination. She had been given a computer, a grandson arranged for internet service, and she finally learned how to open up her email to send and receive email. When I sat her down with a word document program she looked utterly lost. I told her that, before we could start the lesson she would have to investigate the five different menu options at the top of her screen, that I would return in thirty minutes. Before leaving, I told her the most important lesson I believed I could pass on to her of all my thirty-one year love affair with computers was how to use her mouse to click the menus at the top of her screen. Since my fee for that, like everything at the time, was a dollar per minute, she looked very skeptical about getting her money's worth since the clock was running from the moment of my arrival. Reading her thoughts from the look on her face, I reminded her that this was a double-your-money back guarantee to turn her into a master or mistress of computer programs in less than one hour. Reminding her that the money-back guarantee times two was predicated upon her ability to move her mouse to click the menus at the top of her screen no matter what program is being used. She smiled nervously and nodded, and I departed.
Returning from a delightful lunch just twenty-nine minutes later, she was, of course, too polite to tell me to go away. Fortunately, having been through the same experience with others, my first words were, "You see?!!" Can you feel the pleasure I experienced at seeing and hearing a woman in her late seventies laughing and laughing? She was beside herself. She told me that she not only understood how to use her word document program, which happened to be Msoft
When I humans love to complicate things so we can impress other people who don't pay our bills or raise our kids. Any human intelligent enough to read this sentence is more, far more than smart enough to learn the basics of more than a hundred thousand different programs, sometimes more than one at a time, in a maximum of five to ten minutes.
Doesn't even matter if the statement makes sense to you that one hundred percent of the people who open a program and either go to the GETTING STARTED section of the built-in help program for that program, AND people who simply use their mouse to open the five or six or seven choices that are on their menu and play. If the word 'play' does not appeal to you, how about 'experiment'? In other words, whatever it you're doing is related to manipulating words, images, or movies. Those are the only three things you can do with a computer.