Toshiba A10 User Manual

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If Something Goes Wrong
Resolving a hardware conflict
The battery appears not to power the computer for as long as 
it usually does.
If you frequently repeat shallow charge and discharge, the battery 
meter may become inaccurate. Let the battery discharge 
completely, then try charging it again.
Check the power options via your Power Plans (see 
). Have you added a device, such as a PC Card or 
memory module, that takes its power from the battery? Is your 
software using the internal storage drive more? Is the display power 
set to turn off automatically? Was the battery fully charged to begin 
with? All these conditions affect how long the charge lasts.
After a period of time, the battery will lose its ability to perform at 
maximum capacity and will need to be replaced. This is normal for 
all batteries. To purchase a new battery pack, see your accessories 
information included with your computer, or visit the Toshiba Web 
site at 
Refer to this site often to stay 
current on the most recent software and hardware options for your 
computer, and for other product information.
For more information on maintaining battery power, see 
.
Keyboard problems
If, when you type, strange things happen or nothing happens, the 
problem may be related to the keyboard itself.
The keyboard produces unexpected characters.
A keypad overlay may be on. If the numlock light or cursor control 
mode light is on, press 
Fn
 + 
F10
 to turn off the cursor control mode 
light, or 
Fn
 + 
F11
 to turn off the numlock light. 
If the problem occurs when both the keypad overlays are off, make 
sure the software you are using is not remapping the keyboard. 
Refer to the software documentation and check that the program 
does not assign different meanings to any of the keys.
You have connected an external keyboard and the operating 
system displays one or more keyboard error messages.
The keyboard you connected may be defective or incompatible with 
the computer. Try using a different make of keyboard.