If you are a serious PC user - in your profession, especially, even at home for personal use - you have some idea of how important being productive on your PC can really be. Even though we all agree that Productivity is important most people interviewed regularly acknowledge that they are not as productive as they could be. There are many reasons that this is a true state of affairs for many if not most PC users. What we are dealing with here is the most common reason - they never really tried to become productive - to become a PC Flier. Those who have a high proficiency on certain applications can literally fly through their work - hence the term - getting double their contemporaries work done. How is that possible and can you learn to fly? The unqualified answer is YES!
Learning to fly refers to the process of unlearning wasteful things and doing a complete productivity update on your PC skills - focusing in addition on the specific applications that your job or career depends upon. Being able to get done more than other people in the same time - and even turning out better work - is what professional excellence and advancement is about.
Here is your first lesson in learning to fly. This is not intended to be an all-inclusive list of things to do - rather it is an example of the kinds of things you should consider when you make your Learning-to-Fly Plan.
Identify first the key applications that you must depend upon regularly to get your job done. Make sure that the current version of them is on your system. Review in detail these applications and how you use them, performing a real and complete productivity analysis. This involves primarily a review of the application to really determine what facilities and capabilities of the application that could contribute to your productivity are not now used by you. An example here will be of benefit. In the newer versions of MS Word there are a host of automatic functions that Microsoft acknowledges that most users do not apply. My personal preference used to be that I did not want Word to do anything for me - opting to do things manually because I could make it look more exactly like I wanted it. After reviewing Word 2007 I am now a very heavy user of almost all the auto-functions as I opted to learn them no matter the time involved. This was a huge investment in time. However, since I am an extremely heavy user of Word, it became obvious that this was time very well spent. I have become extremely productive using Word and my productivity overall has soared. I can now create a complex Word Doc in ten minutes that would have previously taken me more like twenty. An increase in productivity of this sort - in the range of 100% is exactly what PC Productivity Flying produces.
Increased productivity also means not being slowed down by either hardware or software performance-limiting maintenance that was not done - like maintaining your system registry. Commercially available registry software will allow you to perform the necessary registry fix operations and you can achieve the necessary Registry Repair.
Author Resource:
Author Resource:-> James Roberts is Senior Article Editor for What-Why-How researching and writing on numerous topics including how to use registry software and best ways to do registry repair that work fast!