This is either Water Damage or overuse. you will probably need a new screen or harddrive
One may learn how to fix the HP DV9000 screen at Tom's Hardware. There is a user forum where member may ask questions and share their success on the issue with other members.
YOU HAVE TO PRESS THE BOTTOM SCREEN ANYWHERE(WITH THE DOWSING MACHINE ON THE BOTTOM SCREEN) YOU HAVE TO PRESS THE BOTTOM SCREEN ANYWHERE(WITH THE DOWSING MACHINE ON THE BOTTOM SCREEN)
YOU HAVE TO PRESS THE BOTTOM SCREEN ANYWHERE(WITH THE DOWSING MACHINE ON THE BOTTOM SCREEN) YOU HAVE TO PRESS THE BOTTOM SCREEN ANYWHERE(WITH THE DOWSING MACHINE ON THE BOTTOM SCREEN)
In my experience ... worst case scenerio is that the liquid drips down into the bottom of the screen and then you end up with black streaks on the interior of the screen that you can't wipe off. I will get back to you to let you know if they eventually "dry up" or something. I have read that some people have had success in getting rid of the black streaks by running fans in front of the TV overnight and someone else took the front of the screen off and let it air dry. I'm not brave enough to take apart my TV so we are going with the "fan and wait" method for now.
i have it it does nothing messes up the bottom screen don't use it
what is the located at the bottom of the screen displays the start?
The top - where the screen is - is called the Monitor, and the bottom - where the CPU i.e. brain is - is named the Tower.
when you have it on the bottom screen touch it every where on the bottom screen until it starts blinking
you are probally not in the right sea chart. go to the southwest chart and close the ds
At the bottom of my screen :)
Scrollbars (bars the appear at the side or bottom of the screen that control which part of the information is displayed on the screen)
Drag it to the bottom