aubreyxxx 20240 Report post Posted September 29, 2012 I tried to read the "Computer for Dummies" book and it stilll didn't help me. I just bought a new to me laptop and I was wondering if anyone who had a general understanding of computers, help me understand what I just bought and what all these GB HD MB abbv.'s mean and just help me understand!!!! lol Please & Thanks Aubrey Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
someguy 67067 Report post Posted September 29, 2012 Hd is your hard drive. GB is a gigabyte, how much memory or hard drive space you have. MB is megabyte, the size of your memory or harddrive any other questions Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kechara 2526 Report post Posted September 29, 2012 If you PM with your exact questions I might be able to help with some or all, and I don't know we could post here and I am positive someone else would know. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jazzitup 5652 Report post Posted September 29, 2012 I tried to read the "Computer for Dummies" book and it stilll didn't help me. Maybe this is something you should keep to yourself. :icon_biggrin: 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
MisterMike 1873 Report post Posted September 29, 2012 I tried to read the "Computer for Dummies" book and it stilll didn't help me. I just bought a new to me laptop and I was wondering if anyone who had a general understanding of computers, help me understand what I just bought and what all these GB HD MB abbv.'s mean and just help me understand. What do you want to do with it? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Boomer 33202 Report post Posted September 29, 2012 My suggestion is try to take a course. Most cities during the winter offer these for a couple of hours one night a week through continuing ed. I am a fan of life long learning, and find these are pretty inexpensive. You'll also benefit because you're approaching it at the same level of others, and they'll be asking the same questions as you have. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest V***s*aP*I Report post Posted October 1, 2012 I have a friend that is an IT consultant, If you really want to learn about it I am sure he can help out. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
peizo 100 Report post Posted October 30, 2012 Computers can be confusing! I'm actually a high school computer teacher - The trick is to not be afraid to try things! If you screw something up, you'll learn most from actually digging around and trying to fix it. Specifically, it depends on what you want to do with it? A new computer probably with windows 7 - which means it's pretty user friendly. The control panel can be your friend. What is it you're trying to do? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Rassilon 982 Report post Posted November 5, 2012 Aubrey, add me to me the list of people willing to provide help. Ask questions in public, PM me or get my email from a PM and ask there. Whatever you like. Or we can even do a real time chat at some point if it would help. I know this will sound crazy at first, but I think you would benefit from trying to find online episodes of the television series Bits and Bytes. It is very, very old, which is normally in the computer world a bad thing, but it sounds to me like it would help. It is so old that it felt a need to explain he very basics. There are episodes that are useless to you, like one that give specific instructions on how to use computer that they stopped making in 1984 with a modem so you can connect to other computers at 300 baud. However, they do things like explain how computer memory is measured. The numbers they use will be small, but it is the same idea as we use today. For example, they will tell you what bits are, how they make up megabytes, and they act like 1 megabyte is beyond human comprehension, while today a $35 computer will have 512 megabytes of memory. The idea is the same though, memory still works in computers the same way, a bit is still a bit, a byte is still a byte. That is just one example, basic concepts like that are what the series mostly covers, they just frequently intersperse it with what is now obsolete specifics of their day. Again though just as for help if you have questions. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites