Task Manager Problem Solved

Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Sat, 27 Jan 2001 13:00:00 GMT
I'm running Windows 2000 on a Dell laptop. I've been having a problem with the Task Manager (taskmgr.exe) for a while now. It's supposed to have a menu bar and three tabbed panes: "Applications", "Processes", "Performance". Until tonite, it was coming up as just the "Processes" pane with no menubar and no tabs. I could use that to end processes, and I could type "Esc" to make it go away, but there was no way to get to the "Applications" or "Performance" panes. They were missing in action. After looking around for a couple of hours, I finally happenned on the fix. Double click on the gray area at the bottom of the pane to toggle between the single pane and tabbed-pane views. While looking around, I also discovered that you can bring up the Task Manager by pressing Ctrl-Shift-Esc. I had been using Ctrl-Alt-Del T up to now.

From The Federalist:

Politicians like Ted Kennedy are Orwellian caricatures who apparently believe that TYRANNY IS FREEDOM.... If the American public ever wakes up to this fact, these political charlatans will hopefully suffer the same fate as the defunct tyrants of the former communist countries. -- Thomas J. DiLorenzo

Mike Shelton at the Orange County Register - OK... I think the economy is cool enough...: cartoon commentary on Greenspan and Bush. Hoohoohoohoohoohoohoo.

Darrel Mulloy at Sierra Times - ICC Is A Bad Idea... H.R.1146 Is A Good Solution: encourages us to sign The Liberty Committee's petition asking George Bush to rescind Klinton's signature on the treaty establishing the International Criminal Court. Also asks us to go one step further and encourage our representatives to support Ron Paul's legislation. In particular, HR1146, the American Sovereignty Restoration Act, HR2655, the Separation of Powers Restoration Act of 1999, and HR 407, the Second Amendment Restoration Act. All good ideas. [sierra]

Timothy Sandefur at the Laissez Faire Times - Jefferson's 200th Anniversary: Two hundred years ago, Thomas Jefferson was walked to his inauguration as America's second president. This is a good, though long, article about Mr. Jefferson and the politics of his day. [grabbe]

This is why Jefferson believed in liberty. As he spoke in Washington on that March morning in 1801, he asked what was needed "to make us a happy and prosperous people?" and he answered "a wise and frugal Government, which shall restrain men from injuring one another, shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned. This is the sum of good government, and this is necessary to close the circle of our felicities."

Jim Peron at the Laissez Faire City Times - California Reaps What It Sowed: a good account of why California's socialist/environmentalist policies are directly responsible for the rolling blackouts. The law of supply and demand is a real law. Political law cannot trump it, no matter how hard it tries. [grabbe]

So what went wrong in California? As is typical, the Democrats and their Green allies, wanted to hide the effects of their own destructive polices. The rising demand for energy obviously required a rising supply to meet the needs. But environmental regulation prevented an increased supply. The only way for the pressure, that was building up, to escape would be through rising prices. But consumers would revolt if they started getting electricity bills that increased monthly. And if that happened they just might vote the rascals out and see Environmentalism for the anti-humanity movement that it is.

...

While utilities are "free" to pay the full-price of power they are required to sell it at below cost to consumers. When they bleed money as a result, this is blamed--not on the controls of the retail price--but on the market value of the wholesale price. That utilities can no longer own their own power plants is ignored. That all purchases of wholesale power must go through a state-agency is ignored. The fact that utilities cannot privately enter into contracts for the long-term purchase of power is also ignored. The crisis was created by government price controls, and other regulations are preventing utilities from taking sane measures to solve the problem. So one stupid policy created the crisis and several other stupid policies prevent the problem from being solved. And then mindless Democrats, Greens and other energy fascists, blame the mess on the free market. This mentality, in an individual, would be enough to have him committed to an institution.

Jon Dougherty at WorldNetDaily - 'Invade a home and invite a bullet': South Carolina attorney general backs armed home defense: South Carolina Attorney General Charlie Condon has declared a good way to stop a rash of home break-ins in his state. I like it. If you come into my house against my will, you forfeit your right to life. [market]

"As chief prosecutor of South Carolina, I am today declaring open season on home invaders," Condon said. "That season is year round. Citizens protecting their homes who use force -- even deadly force -- will be fully safeguarded under the law of this state and subject to no arrest, charge or prosecution.

"In South Carolina, would-be intruders should now hear this: Invade a home and invite a bullet," said Cordon, a Republican.

Kelly Truelove at oreillynet - Gnutella: Alive, Well, and Changing Fast: recent developments in Gnutella that are helping it to scale better. [/.]

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