Transferring files – eMachines H3120 Manuel d'utilisation

Page 145

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CHAPTER 12: Maintaining Your Computer

www.emachines.com

138

Transferring files

You can manually transfer your personal data files by copying them to
removable media, such as a diskette, writable CD or DVD, USB flash drive, or Zip
disk, or by using a home network. For more information, see

“Advanced

multimedia software features” on page 95

or

“Using the network” on page 60

.

Finding your files

Many programs automatically save your personal data files in the
My Documents folder. Look in your old computer’s My Documents folder for
personal data files. Use Windows Find or Search to locate other personal data
files. For more information, see

“To find files using Find or Search:” on page 139

,

or

“Searching for files” on page 33

.

To find files in the My Documents folder:

1

In Windows XP, click Start, then click My Documents. The My Documents
window opens and displays many of your saved personal data files. Go to

Step 4

.

- OR -

In Windows 98, Windows Me, or Windows 2000, double-click the
My Computer icon on the desktop. Go to the next step.

2

Double-click the C:\ drive icon.

3

Double-click the My Documents folder. The My Documents window opens
and displays many of your saved personal data files.

4

Copy your personal data files to removable media or to another computer
on your network.

You can often identify different data file types by looking at the file’s extension
(the part of the file name following the last period). For example, a document
file might have a .DOC extension and a spreadsheet file might have an .XLS
extension.

File type

File usually ends in...

Documents

.DOC, .TXT, .RTF, .HTM, .HTML, .DOT

Spreadsheets

.XLS, .XLT, .TXT

Pictures

.JPG, .BMP, .GIF, .PDF, .PCT, .TIF, .PNG, .EPS

Movies

.MPEG, .MPG, .AVI, .GIF, .MOV

Sound and Music

.WAV, .CDA, .MP3, .MID, .MIDI, .WMA

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