Showing posts with label Things. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Things. Show all posts

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Webinar: Getting things done with Office Web Apps

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

You can access and share Office documents with browser-based versions of Word, PowerPoint, Excel, and OneNote. Learn some of the basics and the latest features of these free tools.

Can't see this video? It's also available at Microsoft Showcase? Need a sneak peek? Here's a 30-second trailer.

What you will learn at Tuesday's webinar

Yes, Office Web Apps are different than Office 365 Storing docs with SkyDrive New features customers asked for Working on a doc with someone else at the same time

References for this webinar

Office Web Apps:

SkyDrive:

NEW! Download free Office Webinar Apps: Windows 8 App and the Windows Phone 8 App.

Go to http://aka.ms/offweb to join us live every Tuesday for an Office Webinar and a Q&A session.

--Doug Thomas


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Thursday, November 29, 2012

10 Things that you have to say never again

Since the New Office customer previewdownload, you probably have your vocabulary to meet new things, you do - share, updated links instead of attachments, documents from USB drives in the cloud move and use a pen that never goes out ink. In honor of farewell, "I wish I could content from PDF file, use" and Hello to open trusted PDF files as Word documents, we have together a PowerPoint presentation only 10 of the things that you have to say with the new Office never celebrate. There are dozens more solutions to discover, so diving you a in the preview and @ Office to say, which features your tune (Hashtag # OfficePreview) have changed. If you have not yet downloaded your modern office, you will receive it free of charge under office.com/preview.


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Thursday, September 20, 2012

Four like - to on finding things in your Inbox

A stream of mail most likely flows in your Inbox from colleagues and friends, and from all these eNewsletters and alerts that for logged on. Need a quick way to track certain messages, without having you wade through all of them.

So that you can cut through the clutter, we've put together four tutorials, which show some ways search in Outlook:

1. Find can't this e-Mail message? These three tips can help.
Whether you have a filer (keep carefully organized into the mail folder) or a cart (you keep all your messages in your Inbox), can these three tips will help you to find elusive mail.

2. Better search in Outlook 2010
A common problem with e-Mail search is that they may return too many results. Two features in Outlook 2010 Inbox more efficient make the search: the search contextual tab in the Ribbon and the search list.

3. "Zoo Closed, Cobra Missing": have you tried Outlook Instant Search?
Track when things in your company lost, how much time you are wasting it? Instant Search in Outlook can help.

4. Best practices from Outlook: search folders
A search folder is a virtual folder that provides a view of all e-Mail items that match specific search criteria. With search folders, you can view messages in one place even though they might be stored on other Inbox.

For more information about Outlook search:

Find a message or item with instant search

Best practices for Outlook 2010


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Saturday, September 15, 2012

Webinar: 5 cool things about OneNote (that you probably didn't know)

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Our introductory webinar on OneNote was popular, but lots of you wanted to know more than the basics. In this week's webinar, you'll learn five cool things most users don't know about. We will also go over a few basics for the beginners. We start at 9:15 am Pacific Time with a Q&A to follow. Click the link below or go to http://aka.ms/offweb for more information on how to join the series.

What you will learn at Tuesday's webinar:

Getting your ideas down very quicklyThe best way for quick notes & remindersYes Virginia, OneNote has templatesKeep track of written notes and receiptsHow OneNote is Outlook's best friend

OneNote: The Basics

OneNote: Things you (probably) didn't know

--Doug Thomas


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Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Q & A: things that you really want to know about Excel if function

image

Today's post is brought to you by Frederique Klitgaard. Frédérique is a writer on Office.com (Note: this is a previously published post we publish again because it answers many.)

On my previous post about the if function, I showed follow-up in which you a very simple application of this formula, I would like to address some questions about how to use this function regularly coming.

The classification is pointed out to me, example isn't the best for the if function, but I think that it still helps illustrate the answers to the following questions.

Yes, you can do this using conditional formatting. I have a conditional formatting rule to distinguish the different results of the formula in the worksheet, a different color for cells that contain specific text.

image

For more information about using conditional formatting see Add, modify, search, or clear conditional formats.

Yes, meet to multiple conditions, you can use the and include and/or or functions, so that you can specify additional criteria, the up in value, whether true or false. If test results are I for testing the entire quarter, I can, for example, the AND function, to determine which completed the quarter with flying colors on the basis of the following formula:

IF(and(B2+E2>=178), "Excellent!", "")

image

Yes, you can text in all arguments to this function, as long as you enclose it in quotation marks. In the examples above, the formulas have returned text-based results, but you can also text in the argument test as . Want to use a star system, in addition to class, can I use, for example, the following formula:

IF (D2 = "A", "**", IF (D2 = "B", "**", IF (D2 = "C", "**", "")))

image

Keep in mind that two of the cells were empty. By adding two quotation marks without text in between (the last argument of this formula), I specify that cells should be empty, if the values are not the criteria. And Yes, I centered the stars after entering the formula just for looks!

Yes, you can include calculations in the formula, do the percentages. Use a point system, I could use such as the following formula:

= IF (B2 > 79, B2 B. 1%, IF (B2 > 89%, B2 ** 5%, ""))

image

Because commas argument in a formula are used as delimiters, be they carefully not to use as the decimal separator in the values that you want to calculate.

For more information on this feature, see our function reference article, If function.


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Sunday, July 3, 2011

Oprah's - I mean the Crabby favorite things: Excel 2010

But still an old hat (as the Hogwarts Sorting Hat) can discover new tricks, who do not know it would be possible. Excel 2010 has some really great new additions, and improvements (I should probably not use this word-improvements-but everything and everyone to some rooms to itself to some squeeze Mode...richtig?).

And then one day the clouds part and Dionysus, the Greek God of wine and partying and fertility-means, in our context here, productivity-smiles be cute, naughty, benevolent smile after below you and y ?d?? * you are anointed! But with what?

Read to find out...

As an example, if you use Excel 2007 have, what was new for you a few years (the Ribbon) and was then although essential, had a boost for the version 2010; a touch up, an improvement (, that, by the way, a good many of you requested). And if you've been with versions earlier than Excel 2007, you something new (the Ribbon always are) and it is been perfected.

But there is more, uh, what was already pretty good additions, that you may be able to Mkae use of.

First up: the band in order to achieve the nonconformist in you:

Here is a function that really wanted to you... and now you get it. The Ribbon in Excel 2007 introduction, although it was possible to add in a quick access toolbar ( QAT) commands you could not add your own tabs or groups on the Ribbon dang it! In Excel 2010, however, can create your own tabs and groups and rename or change the order of the built-in tabs and groups. Sweet!

Learn more about customizing the Ribbon

What better time than now, it's the holiday season, about Sparklines speak. Although the name is so nice and festive, dunk it in your coffee or drape it over your Christmas decorated coat would help this effervescent little guys you, patterns and trends in your data, so that it is more useful for you to discover.

Sparklines are tiny charts - the good nature of the computer gremlins, actually - that fit in a single cell that can visually combine trends in addition to data. They are especially useful if you want to view a snapshot of it all in an easy-to-read format.

You, do not GO pass, our $200 (which, by the way, is it only two dollars in monopoly junior!) to collect and to see Doug's Office casual video of Sparklines. Doug has only a certain... "everyman's" flare to the explanation of things, and I often feel that he and I have the same sensitivity of what Office customers want to learn and how they want to learn...

If you want to only see simple images as examples, in the following example, at a glance you as any (fictional) Department in may carried out:

Example of sparklines

(But I know this image is static, it does not really tell the story particularly useful, so again - and be a boob about you, please - go see Doug's Office casual video about Sparklines .)

AutoFilter buttons now stay visible with table headers in your table, so that you can sort and filter data quickly and without a scroll all back up the way to the top of the table.

(I like this video, the guy who created and it tells this beautiful, soothing, "it's as easy as pie" (what it is) tell and run through it.)

Go find you out for yourself, what's new - and improved (oops...)(I have it again!) in Excel 2010.

Office partner

* y ?d?? means voila in Greek


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Tuesday, June 28, 2011

OneNote review: Things that you miss in may

Here's our quick monthly summary of OneNote from stories and tips to populous during the month of May. If you, a great OneNote tip, history or post, we here list do not know, please enter a comment below!

The OneNote Rewind

Write you, if you know any other great OneNote tips, stories, or posts that you last month, saw this a comment below, know us to be thinking. Thank you very much!

--Michael C. Oldenburg


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Monday, April 11, 2011

OneNote review: Things you missed in March

As we have the habit of the preparation at the end of each month, a quick summary of OneNote here is stories and tips from around to the Web during the March.

A large OneNote tip, history or mail this list do not know? Leave a comment below to let us know.

The OneNote Rewind

Write you, if you know any other great OneNote tips, stories, or posts that you last month, saw this a comment below, know us to be thinking. Thank you very much!

--Michael C. Oldenburg


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Saturday, April 9, 2011

11 Things Every Beginner Needs to Learn to Love Illustrator

People often find Illustrator daunting because it works a little differently from other applications. Some aren’t quite sure what it does and others have tried it and been confused by it. Adobe Certified Instructor Russell Viers believes that Illustrator doesn’t have to be scary; in fact, it can be fun. In this workshop Russell distills his vast knowledge of Illustrator into 11 simple things that open up a whole world of possibilities. Before you know it you’ll be playing around with art and logos and creating intricate designs by combining paths with the Pathfinder. The universe of Illustrator awaits you.
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This entry was posted on April 5, 2011, 2:48 pm and is filed under Illustrator. You can follow any responses to this entry through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.


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Wednesday, April 6, 2011

7 Favorite Things About Windows 7 List Winner

A NEW SPORT?

First man: My wife suggested that I take up a new sport this summer.

Second man: Well, that's nice. It shows that she has your interests at heart. Did she make any suggestions?

First man: As a matter of fact, she did. By the way, how do you play this Russian Roulette?

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