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Microsoft
"Guided Help" Programs
There's a relatively
unknown service that Microsoft provides to help solve user's common
issues called "Guided Help". I plan to introduce you to it today and
I think you'll be pleasantly surprised. It's been out about a year
as far as I can tell, yet many have never heard of it. After a
conversation with my friend about it I thought it was a good time to
write about it. I've never really trusted it and I sort of like to
do my own modifications. So I guess I've always avoided it. But
today I was
determined to turn my PC
over to Microsoft. God help me.
Quote
from Microsoft
Guided Help is a program
that you can download from some Microsoft Knowledge Base
articles. Depending on the task, Guided Help can automatically
perform the task that is described in the article, or Guided Help
can guide you through the steps to perform the task yourself.
Wow, did you get that?
Let me review it with you. You have an issue. You search the MS
Knowledge Database for your answer. You find it. You start reading
about what it is you have to do to fix the problem. You're not
really sure that you feel comfortable performing these tasks on your
system. Well Microsoft then provides help at this point. They
provide a file for you to download that will either step you through
graphically using your system or do it for you. That's right, do it
for you. How cool is that?
Typical Scenario To Follow Along With
Let's start with
something simple. So let's pick "How to perform disk error checking
in Windows XP".
Note:
You can follow along if you like by
downloading the guided help file from the site:
>>>>> Guided
Help Database
Once you are at the page
and find the "How to perform disk error checking in Windows XP"
listing click on it. At first you are disappointed because the same
old Microsoft step by step instructions are displayed. Ah, scroll
down a bit and you'll see a message like the one below indicating
that Guided Help is available for this issue.
Guided
Help to check the hard disk for errors

So I click on the link
and proceeded to download the .exe file to my downloads directory. I
then closed all my open
windows and navigated to
the downloads directory to run the .exe file.
This is the first screen
you will see:

Just to test it out I
selected "Another Computer". Here's the next screen I saw.

Not bad I thought. So I
cancelled out and restarted the program again so I could select
"This Computer".
When I did that here's
what I saw next.

WOW !!!!! You impressed
yet? Well, I was starting to get impressed, if it would work right.
It might screw up my computer, then what good is it. So being the
cautious guy that I am, I select "Show Me" first. It then proceeded
to take me through a graphical step by step procedure of how to
check my drives. It was an impressive tutorial. Maybe my
expectations with MS are just so low that I'm easy to impress. I'll
leave it to you to download the file and step through the tutorial.
I don't want to ruin it for you.
Next I decided to let it
try and check my drives for me. Gulp! Here goes nothing.
It worked!
It goes through the same
tutorial, stopping along the way whenever there was a decision to be
made to let me choose such things as which drive to check, to fix or
not fix errors, etc... Wow.
There are over 200 Guided
Help Files, not that MS had a hard time finding any issues for their
Guided Help program. :)
I'm beginning to think It
might not be bad idea to download a bunch of the more serious ones,
like recovering from a corrupted registry, and having them on CD or
USB drive for safe keeping at a later date.
I haven't tested the more
serious ones out yet and I'm not about to do so on my production PC.
But this might warrant powering up the old backup PC and see just
how well they perform. Microsoft could be on to something here. I'm
definitely going to start downloading more of these and start
testing them out. Maybe MS should come out with an ISO of the whole
collection. Alright, we're losing our heads here.
Hope this helps or
informs.
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