January 8th 04, 12:53 AM
>-----Original Message-----
>Screech wrote:
>> I was wondering if anybody has had this problem and what to
>> do about it.
>>
>> I had been playing a game (tribes 2)when the game crashed,
>> so I hit ctrl-alt-delte, which did not respond; i did it
>> again, and finally it did respond, so i closed T2. However,
>> the computer must have overloaded in some way because now I
>> cannot see/access the upperportion of the ctrl-alt-delete
>> panel (where the tabs to see Proceses and other things, and
>> the minimize and close buttons are located). I can stil
>> open the remaining ctrl-alt-del panel to close programs but
>> I cannot get to the rest of it so I cannot close any extra
>> processes. Any suggesions would be helpful.....
>
>Try double-clicking on the upper part of the task manager
window's
>border; that should restore the task manager to its full
view. (Thanks
>to Carey Frisch, who pointed this out in another thread
here a while back.)
>
>--
>+-----------------------------------------+
>| Mark Shroyer > |
>+-----------------------------------------+
>
> We all do no end of feeling, and we mistake it for
thinking.
> - Mark Twain
>.
>thank you thank you thank you
>Screech wrote:
>> I was wondering if anybody has had this problem and what to
>> do about it.
>>
>> I had been playing a game (tribes 2)when the game crashed,
>> so I hit ctrl-alt-delte, which did not respond; i did it
>> again, and finally it did respond, so i closed T2. However,
>> the computer must have overloaded in some way because now I
>> cannot see/access the upperportion of the ctrl-alt-delete
>> panel (where the tabs to see Proceses and other things, and
>> the minimize and close buttons are located). I can stil
>> open the remaining ctrl-alt-del panel to close programs but
>> I cannot get to the rest of it so I cannot close any extra
>> processes. Any suggesions would be helpful.....
>
>Try double-clicking on the upper part of the task manager
window's
>border; that should restore the task manager to its full
view. (Thanks
>to Carey Frisch, who pointed this out in another thread
here a while back.)
>
>--
>+-----------------------------------------+
>| Mark Shroyer > |
>+-----------------------------------------+
>
> We all do no end of feeling, and we mistake it for
thinking.
> - Mark Twain
>.
>thank you thank you thank you