You can press <F1> at any time for help.
You can view the message log by selecting Message from the Tool menu.  The message log contains any critical errors encountered during startup.
Pressing Alt-Enter shows the properties of the focused item.
To restore a file to a different place, simply drag and drop it in a target folder.
To restore a file to a different place, click on the file then click the Move button on the toolbar.
To restore a file to a different name, simply rename the file.
To restore a file to a directory that does not exist, click on the New Folder button on the toolbar then drag the file or directory into the new folder.
To restore all files from a particular session, click the Check button on the toolbar to access to a list of instances. If you do not choose <Latest>, only those files in the session selected will be restored.
If you do not want to restore security information about directories and files, select Advanced Options from the Restore Options.
The most effective way to schedule a backup job is to use one of the predefined rotation methods.
It is normally not a good idea to run with scissors.
You can right click on an item to show the context menu.
You can press <*> to expand the tree in multiple levels.
You can view the online diagnostics of a machine or device from its properties window.
You can refresh the view by pressing <F5>.
You can see who is currently logged in to your TapeWare server from the properties window of your machine.
You can run multiple jobs at the same time with TapeWare.
You can view your job status from a remote TapeWare client.
TapeWare's web page is http://www.tapeware.com.
You can filter file selections by pressing the Selection Filter button from the toolbar.
You can resize or maximize your file selection tab page to give you more room.
You can run TapeWare as a service under Windows NT or Windows 95.
You can close the job status window and have the job running in the background.

