Toshiba BRnR LX.FR406.035 User Manual
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program of your choice. All of the Easy-launch buttons can be reconfigured to your
liking with Acer’s Launch Manager software.
As with most notebook keyboards, engaging the
numeric keypad for numeric data entry. The
combination with specifically-labeled keys perform the usual shift-key functions from
blanking and toggling screens when a monitor is connected, to putting the notebook
in sleep mode, adjusting the volume of the speakers and toggling the touchpad on
and off. The keys are just the right size and have a firm, but quiet touch. The slightly
curved ergonomic layout of the keyboard will probably require a brief period of
adjustment to get used to. If your local retailer carries the Acer Ferrari 4000 or other
Acer notebooks that have the same keyboard—some of the Acer Travelmate 3000
and 4000-series notebooks do—I’d recommend trying it out in a store first to make
sure that you like it, before making a commitment. The generous-sized touchpad
with its 4-way scroll-button is the fastest, most responsive I’ve ever used on a
notebook, requiring only the lightest of touches without any skipping or lagging.
This is the Acer
Ferrari 4000's boot
screen. Pressing
you straight into the
BIOS; Hitting
you into Acer's
eRecovery System.
Let's take a look.
Acer's eRecovery
loads from a special
hidden factory
partition. Type in the
password (six zeroes
by default, which can
be changed) and
press
This is the eRecovery
Main Menu, which
uses the arrow keys
for navigation. Press
highlighted System
Recovery option.
Here you can restore
the Factory Default
Image, which resides
on eRecovery's
hidden partition, and
will erase everything
on the hard drive and
restore the Ferrari
4000 to its brand new
out-of-the-box
condition. You can
also restore the
laptop from an image
created on CD or DVD
media with eRecovery
under Windows XP.
Remember the
password you typed
in earlier? Here's
where you change
it...