On a Mac, you can close all open windows of the current application by pressing Command (⌘) + Option (⌥) + W. However, to close all applications and their windows, you can use Command (⌘) + Q to quit each application individually. Alternatively, you can use Command (⌘) + H to hide applications, leaving them open but minimizing their windows.
Not on Windows XP or Vista.
You can go to File: New Tab. Or you can use the shortcut Ctrl+T You can also close the same tab by pressing Ctrl+W
To minimize all open windows on the screen, you can use the "Show Desktop" icon, which is typically located in the bottom-right corner of the taskbar on Windows. Alternatively, you can press the "Windows key + D" keyboard shortcut to achieve the same effect. On macOS, you can use the "F11" key or the "Mission Control" gesture to show the desktop.
Usually on the bottom left corner of the screen (next to the "start" button) the is an icon "Show Desktop".This is partially true but actually this doesn't minimize windows, it just hides them. There is not button for this but the keyboard shortcut is windows key + M and to reverse it the shortcut is windows key + shift + M
my friend, when you open the car with the key control and you'r pressing the botton for more than 3 seconds, the mini cooper automatically opens the sunroof and windows, this just works with the open, if you try to close with the control the sunrooof and the windows stay it will in the same place.
Windows 98: You can't (using the Operating System) Windows 2000: CTL+ALT+DEL then choose "Lock Computer" Windows XP: Same as Windows 2000 or use shortcut Windows Key + L
For most things, a Ctrl + F4, pressed at the same time, will do the trick.
There is no such thing as a "Windows XP Word file." You open the files in Vista the exact same way you do in Windows XP - with Microsoft Word.
i would ask you the same thing!
no.
that depends on which museum, unless all museums open and close at the same time right?
Click the Start button , click All Programs, right-click the Startup folder, and then click Open.Open the location that contains the item you want to create a shortcut to.Right-click the item, and then click Create Shortcut. The new shortcut appears in the same location as the original item.Drag the shortcut into the Startup folder.The next time you start Windows, the program will run automatically.