Your questions really should be addressed to ASUS since they customize their installtions the way they want. I have some other questions related to this :ġ- If I click on recover, Do it will remove all of my hard disk data? or only the data of drive c get deleted?Ģ- If I click on backup, it says to insert an external storage to save the backup on it, but How I can recover this backup ? What will occur If I click on recover ? It ask me for an backup file or just restore the Asus backup which is on hidden drive ? Thank you, The Asus support agent said this too ! Just for your information, new netbook should be came with the Support DVD and recovery system otherwise you may ask to the vendor where you bought about that.
In the back of my netbook, there is a serial for windows 7 starter too. Support Liliputingĭisclosure: Some links on this page may be monetized by Skimlinks and Amazon's and eBay's affiliate programs.I have bought an ASUS 1005P netbook, it has a windows 7 starter pre-installed. To be honest, I wouldn’t recommend you try this at all unless you’re desperately trying to get run some game or other app that won’t run under any other conditions. The result is that text will look a bit fuzzy and hard to read.
And that means some of those pixels are going to be shaped funny.
Instead you’re using software to emulate a higher resolution screen. You’re not actually creating more pixels on your display.
This solution is similar to the driver update I told you about last month.īut there is a catch. Both will provide a bit of extra space on your screen, making it easier to work with programs that have large windows or minimum display resolution requirements higher than 1024 x 600. Once you’ve made the change and rebooted your computer, you should be able to use the built in display resolution tool in Windows 7 to try out two new resolutions: 1024 x 7 x 864. You can find step by step instructions at Netbook Live. You have to search for a registry setting called “Display1_ DownScalingSupported” and change the value from 0 to 1. Fortunately, there’s a way to trick your netbook into thinking it has a higher resolution display - assuming you’re running Windows 7. And while it’s generally good enough for viewing most web pages, videos, and other apps, every now and again you’re likely to run into an application that requires a higher resolution screen to run. Most netbooks have the same display resolution. OK, I made that number up off the top of my head, but aside from a handful of models with 1024 x 576 or 1366 x 768 pixel screens, it’s pretty much true. Roughly 90% of all 10 inch netbooks on the market today have 1024 x 600 pixel displays.