In windows xp, clicking on clock over document icon displays list of recently opened documents. LOCATION, C:\Documents and settings\Administrator C:\Documents and settings\Administrator(name) (Icon may be hidden & needs to make unhide in control panel, Folder options,view, Show hidden files and folders.) OR, You can directly view list of recently opened documents, click start, My recent documents.
The desktop itself is a visual display of the desktop folders that reside in C:\Documents and Settings\(username/all users)\Desktop (unless an administrator has moved the folder to another location) When the computer loads, it looks to C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Desktop for items to be displayed to all users and displays those in the main window. It will then look to ../*username*/desktop for personal desktop items to display if there are any.
Window
Task bar.
yes
The portion of the screen that displays when windows XP is loaded is called the Desktop. It features icons for different programs, the Taskbar and the Start Button.
Any icon on the desktop will stay on the desktop when you restart your computer. Upon windows shutdown, Windows saves all of your settings and preferences. So when you restart all of the icons, documents, pictures and everything else will stay right were it was.
In Windows, the default installation drive letter is C:, and the desktop folder will be in C:\Users\\Desktop\ (Windows Vista and newer) or C:\Documents and Settings\\Desktop\ (Windows XP), and for GNU/Linux distributions, /home//Desktop/(or simply ~/Desktop/ for any user that's logged in, will be directed to their own desktop folder)
"My Documents" in Windows is a folder (directory) where it is suggested you save your documents. Windows assigns an independent one too each user. You don't have to follow this suggestion, but it usually keeps things easier to find if you do.
The desktop is the main computer screen that is visible when there are no open windows. It usually has a color, graphic, or photo background with icons for various shortcuts or documents. It is also associated with the taskbar (Windows) and dock (Mac).
You click with your Mouse on the Favicon (The icon of the website to the right of the Address bar where the website link is) and you drag that to your Desktop or Windows Explorer Folder which in your case can be My Documents. :)
Log off
Yes. Documents are platform agnostic; as long as you have a program on Windows to open the document, there should be no problems.