142 Micros of t ® Window s® X P Feat uresw w w . d e l l . c o m | s u p p o r t . d e l l . c o m 4 Select the type of operating system for which the program wasdesigned or on which it ran successfully, and then click Next>.5 If necessary, as for some games, select display settings for the program.6 Click Next>.7 To test the compatibility settings for the program, click Next>.After you have determined whether the program is running correctly,return to the Program Compatibility Wizard window.8 Select Yes if the program ran correctly, No, try different compatibilitysettings, or No, I am finished trying compatibility settings and clickNext>.9 Select either Yes to send information about the settings you used andwhether they fixed the problem, or select No, and then click Next>.10 Click Finish to close the wizard.System RestoreThe System Restore feature of Windows XP provides the capability torestore the operating system, in the event of a problem, to a previous statewithout losing personal data files (such as Word documents, drawings, or e-mail).System Restore actively monitors system file changes and some applicationfile changes to record or store previous versions before the changes occurred.System Restore maintains a rolling record of restore points; to limit theamount of space used, older restore points are purged to make room fornewer ones.In the event of a serious operating system problem, System Restore can beused from Safe Mode or Normal Mode to go back to a previous system state,restoring optimal system functionality.