Showing posts with label Their. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Their. Show all posts

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Their top 10 favorite Office posts of the year 2012

Office Best of 2012The Office blogs is really 14 blogs to a rolled up. The posts on this list were the most popular in all of them. Find out what most people aroused curiosity about the new Office and the like - to which they found the most useful.

If the new Office haven't tried you, the Customer Preview site.

Office next - Office and the cloud
Is multiplied by the number of devices you use every day. Their content and applications wherever you are and on what device you use in a manner that is consistent and familiar to you should be for you. Learn how we have connected Office to the cloud from your favorite devices to this productivity make possible.
 Insert Outlook-blog - email in your Outbox? Try this.
Ever thought that your message is already long not only to discover, is it still in your Outbox? Check out this post for some reasons and solutions.

Blog - with multiple criteria in Excel lookup formulas in Excel
The performance of VLOOKUP! Written by JP Pinto, the great white shark-Award for the best article written in VLOOKUP week, this post answers some frequently asked questions to the use multiple criteria to return a value.

Use the new Office with touch Office next-
Learn more about the new Office-touch experience for Windows 8 developed.

Excel blog - score! Merging data from multiple worksheets
How you merge into a main worksheet data from many worksheets? Now, use a feature called consolidate-- is an intuitive name(!).

Office News - Office 365-University for students of higher education institutions
Office 365 is an attractive option for families, people with multiple devices, and small businesses. The announcement of the Office 365 University expands our subscriptions offer the University and students.

Word tip: blog - how to cut and paste without formatting mess
Find out why the Paste Options button is your friend. It simplifies the common task, cut and paste by you sure your formatting is exactly as you want it.

Outlook blog - 5 tips to use Bcc in Outlook email
Some of the email recipients must keep secret? This article shows how and why use Bcc, required to ensure that the right people receive the message.

Office blogs - Webinar: preview of the new Office
First of all the deals Office with the new Office, as well as information about Customer Previewversions and Office subscriptions.

Transform PowerPoint-blog tips for your Excel data into PowerPoint diagrams
You will find recommendations for the use of data in a presentation and a step-by-step guide to convert data from Excel into PowerPoint diagrams PowerPoint MVP Ellen Finkelstein.

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

Join us for Tuesday’s free webinar: Customers share their favorite shortcuts

AppId is over the quota

Hier sind die Tastaturkürzel, die heute von Kunden erwähnt:

Cora

Es ist eine kürzere Tastenkombination für das Bearbeiten/ersetzen-Fenster in Word und Excel: STRG + H.

VandermondBG

Ich benutze viel STRG + F1 (ein-/ausblenden-Band), weitere visuelle Raum haben.

Garrydene

Nach dem Mittagessen oder eine Pause kommen wir zurück zur letzten Änderung oder Überarbeitung in Ihrem Dokument UMSCHALT + F5. Es geht zur letzten Änderung oder Überarbeitung.

Bonita

Zum Kopieren STRG + C und dann STRG + V für einfügen in Word

CJ

Vielleicht erwähnt... aber ich liebe STRG + Y zu wiederholen, was ich getan habe.

Carl

Strg + Alt +.  [Zeitraum] Ergebnisse in die 3-Punkt-Pause als eine Einheit.

Carl

Geschütztes Abstand ist praktisch in Datumsangaben. Verwenden Sie STRG + LEERTASTE, um statt nur ein Raum, um den ganzen Tag zusammen zu halten, wenn Sie Text in eine Zeile hinzufügen. Es wird gemeinsam bewegen. STRG + UMSCHALT-[Bindestrich] ähnliche Ergebnisse mit Bindestrichen.

EXCEL

Anoop

STRG + UMSCHALT + Ende... Markieren Sie alle Zellen, die Daten im Rahmen der Zelle nach diesem Befehl enthält

Mike & Melanie

Zwischen Blättern wechseln: Strg + Bild nach oben oder unten


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Friday, October 12, 2012

Make your images look their best

Today's post comes from Alyshia Olsen, to improve the program manager responsible for our photo-editing tools in the new Publisher.

People use Publisher to a lot of different types of publications - newsletters, photo albums, and brochures for example. These publications look with rich images better. In the new publisher we have with you easily publications create professional effects with a few simple clicks.  Our new graphic features can be used to optimize images, the over or underexposed or one to emphasize certain part of an image.

You can change your image brightness and contrast as well as the colors of the image from a set of default styles.  Go after you insert an image to see previews how your image with the preset effects will look for formatting graphic Tools tab on the Ribbon. As you hover over the options under corrections and Recolora live preview appears in the publication.

Recolor the first conform, we added the ability to photos based on a desired color palette (for example they make black and white, or sepia or toned to a certain color to the rest of your publication are the same.)

The Gallery Recolor is on the picture tools tab with all the tools, you need to fit your publication photos:

Here are the results of the few recoloring effects. Black and white and sepia are shown below, but you can choose any color from the color picker:

The next conform, which we added to the possibility of photos too dark, washed out to correct or need just a little bit a different effect really shine. The corrections Gallery is on the picture tools with a variety of brightness and contrast Presets tab to help you quickly correct your images or make more in the deep tools to fine-tune.

The results of some of our corrections effects are shown below. You can see that a washed out image is better looks with less brightness and more contrast, while a gloomy picture with more brightness and less contrast looks better. Try these effects to your pictures, look their best in the publication to get.

Adjust your images to help you, we moved to the command to cut to shape to a more accessible location: in the crop drop - down-list Format tab image tools .

 

Simply select a shape, and then drag the crop markers around the shape to your image in a circle, oval, cropping or other form in our gallery!

During the harvest:

After the harvest:

In the new Publisher, we can, from any image beautiful full-page image backgrounds create added. Fill all image adjustments that you want, such as recoloring or add transparency, and with the right mouse button image and choose apply to background. This command is found on the tab page design image calculations. You can then fill the background, or tile - the image in the background.

You can mix and match all these image adjustments and cropping, to customize the look of your publication. The page in the picture below has a color, and changing brightness and contrast, and was applied to the background of a page:

This new image adjustment options offer you more choice than ever before, allowing you to get the right look for your publications. All these changes were you from the image adjustments feature crew brought. We hope that you try some of these built-in options in the next publication!


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Monday, April 11, 2011

Their Manuskript--from idea to finished

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Your manuscript--from idea to done 5 Apr 2011 3:30 PM Comments 0

How do you generate ideas? And how do you go from those first ideas through the editing and the polishing to a completed project?


April is National Poetry Month in the U.S. and National Poetry Writing Month, or NaPoWriMo, so I'm seeing lots of prompts and ideas fountaining onto pages and into pixels. But what do you do with all of those scintillating glimmers?


These videos walk you through different ways to get from start of an idea to a finished work. They're a mix of Office 2007 and Office 2010, but the processes work in both.


Doug Thomas tackles idea-generation in his new Office Casual video. And in this video, I show how I capture my poetry ideas anywhere.




Yes, it's in OneNote, but I tend to work a lot in OneNote and Word--my dynamic duo of writing tools.


Those ideas are just the beginning. Next comes the refinement. Again, I use OneNote for my many, many drafts, and then I put the final version in a Word document.



I prefer to work on book-length projects, so at some point I need to pull them all together into a manuscript.



Then I add the finishing touches--page numbers, a table of contents, and cover pages.



Now to get it out into the world. I track where I'm sending my manuscript so that I don't miss an opportunity and I don't spend time and postage sending to the same place.



(I can also use Outlook and OneNote to make sure I don't miss a deadline.)


You can submit your own helpful how-to Office videos to Office.com, and help others go from start to success.


-- Joannie Stangeland

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