Showing posts with label Working. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Working. Show all posts

Friday, April 12, 2013

Webinar: Working with Office on Windows 8

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AppId is over the quota

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The webinar is over. The video will be posted shortly or go to http://aka.ms/offweb for more information on how to join the series live every Tuesday. 

If you are working with Windows 8--or your business will be using Windows 8 soon--check out this week's webinar. We will go over shortcuts and quick navigation for keyboard and mouse, plus answer your questions.

What you will learn at Tuesday's webinar

Using a mouse and keyboard with Windows 8The Start ScreenKeyboard shortcutsIf you have a touch device

References for this webinar

--Doug Thomas


View the original article here

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Webinar: Working with photos in Office

Office Webinars

The webinar is over. The video is coming soon. Connect from the series, please visit http://aka.ms/offweb more information.

If a picture is worth a thousand words, you would get the details better law. This week Webinar we explain the tools in PowerPoint, Word, and Outlook, which make an image look good.

What do you learn at Tuesday's webinar

Pictures see a bad image GoodWrapping inserting and customizing an ImageMake new TextA tool for PowerPoint 2013

References for this webinar

--Doug Thomas


View the original article here

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Webinar: Working with sound in PowerPoint

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Yes, yes, we know. Sounds in PowerPoint can be cheesy. But let’s have some fun. We’ll show you how to master sound in PowerPoint including inserting effective sounds, play a soundtrack, and time animations to that soundtrack.

What you will learn at Tuesday's webinar

Insert sound effects into a presentation Trigger those effects with animations Insert music as a soundtrack Use rehearsal timings so that things appear at specific points in the music Use audio bookmarks to trigger animations

References for this webinar

Learn how to join us every Tuesday for an Office 15-Minute Webinar plus a live Q&A session: http://aka.ms/offweb.

--Doug Thomas


View the original article here

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Working with images is easier in the new Word

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This week's post comes from Theresa Estrada, the Word team program manager working on improvements to images.

How many times have you tried to move an image or a chart in Word and gotten frustrated when it unexpectedly landed somewhere other than where it was dropped?  Working with images is one of the top pain points that we hear about from customers, so in the new Word, we’ve simplified the experience with 3 great new features:

The Layout Options button gives you quick access to change how your image interacts with the rest of your document.Live layout lets you see your document’s new layout in real time as you reposition, resize or rotate images

Alignment guides help you visually align your images with important areas of the document

Our first step in simplifying the way you work with images was to add the Layout Options button.  This button appears at the upper right of any image, video, shape, chart, SmartArt or textbox that you select and gives you quick access to the text wrapping options. 

In prior versions of Word, images were inserted as “In line with text” by default.  Inline images are treated exactly like a character of text, which means their position is constrained to the lines of text on the page.  Great for predictability, but not so great if you want to place the image in a more interesting place on the page, like the top right corner, or if you want the image to look integrated with the text in the document.

For many versions of Word, we’ve offered the ability to wrap text around images in a variety of ways.  In the new Word, we’ve made it even easier to find those options and quickly switch between them.  Simply click the Layout Options button and choose one of the six choices in the call-out under “With text wrapping”

We’ve even made it simple to set your default wrapping style.  Just right click on one of the styles in the Layout Options call-out and click Set as default.  Next time you insert a picture, chart or SmartArt, it will use your default wrapping style.

Once you switch to one of the “With text wrapping” styles, you’ll notice two things:

An anchor icon shows up in the documentThe options at the bottom of the Layout Options call-out are available

Images that have one of the text wrapping styles applied are referred to as “floating”.  Other than the obvious visual distinction between inline and floating images, they are also treated differently under the covers.  As I mentioned above, inline images are just like oversized characters.  Floating images, however, are attached to the text by a hidden character that we refer to as the anchor.  In past versions of Word, you could go into Word’s Advanced Options dialog box and turn on the display of the anchor character.  To make this a little more obvious, we’ve turned it on by default in the new Word. 

Knowing where the anchor is on the page can help put you in control of how your image behaves as you edit the document. The most important rule to remember about anchors is that an image and its anchor always have to be on the same page.  This explains why sometimes, when you add or remove text in a document, an image will suddenly jump to a different page.  What has happened is the text containing the anchor was moved to a different page and took the image along for the ride.

The floating text wrapping styles control the way that an image interacts with the text in your document – whether text can flow around all sides, only on the top and bottom of a figure, or if the image is above or below the text.  But there’s another piece to the puzzle of controlling image behavior: what happens to the image when text is added or removed from the document?  Sometimes, you want the picture to remain relative to the text – in other words, move up and down on the page along with the text where it is anchored.  In this case, you’ll want to choose the Move with Text option in the call-out.  Other times, you might want the image to be relative to the page – in other words, always stay in a certain spot on the page it's anchored to, like the in the top right corner or in the center of the margins.  In these cases, you’ll want to choose the Fix Position on Page option.

Regardless of which option you pick, just remember that the text the image is anchored to always has to be on the same page as the image.  So if you move the text containing the anchor to a different page, the image is going to move as well.

Without a doubt, my favorite feature in the new Word is Live Layout.  In the past, when you moved a floating image in a Word document you would see a semi-transparent “ghost” of the image moving around on top of the text:

When you dropped the ghost, the rest of the document content would update – which sometimes lead to unexpected results and meant it could take a couple of tries to position the image just right. 

With the new Word, when you move a floating image, you’ll see the layout of the document changing in real time so you can position your image with confidence on the first try.  Live Layout also works for resize and rotation of both inline and floating images, as well as for resizing table rows and columns.  Give it a try and tell us what you think!

Using Live Layout, floating images can be placed nearly anywhere on a page, but there are a handful of places where you’re more likely to want to place them: aligned to interesting areas like the margins or edge of the page, centered on the page or aligned with a paragraph of text.  You can use Live Layout to help accomplish this, but we’ve also added some handy alignment guides to help make sure you hit exactly the spot you’re aiming for. 

As you move your image around the page and reach one of the alignment locations, you’ll see the green alignment guide lines appear.  Here, you can see that the image is aligned to the top of the first paragraph and the left margin.

 If you are ever wondering if an image is actually aligned to something, just click on a hold for a second: any guides that it is aligned with will appear.

I hope you’ll spend some time trying out our improvements in the Office Customer Preview and tell us what you think. If you’re interested in learning more about inline and floating images, take a few more minutes to read these posts:

Understanding images: The basics
Understanding images: Wrapping styles
Understanding images: Staying in position

 

The figures feature crew is excited to share all the improvements to working with images with you!


View the original article here

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Acrobat/Reader 10: Save button not working for PDFs referenced from long URLs

Acrobat/Reader 10: Save button not working for PDFs referenced from long URLs « Adobe enterprise product blog | David McMahon function clearSearch() {document.search_form.s.value = "";} .recentcomments a{display:inline !important;padding:0 !important;margin:0 !important;}adobe.com      Adobe enterprise product blog | David McMahon / Acrobat/Reader 10: Save button not working for PDFs referenced from long URLsby dmcmahonbutton (3)disabled (1)save (1)url (5)  

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Sunday, September 16, 2012

Working with tables in the new Word

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AppId is over the quota

Today's post comes from Caitlin Ashley-Rollman, the program manager on the Word team responsible for improving our Tables experience.

It’s all about the little things. 

For this release of Word, we wanted to make your lives a little bit easier by simplifying the tasks you do every day. Since tables play an important role in many documents, they seemed like a good place to start. In our improvements to tables for the new Word, we focused on making it easier for you to create and format basic tables. 

When we started looking into the most common things people do to tables, adding new columns and rows was at the top of the list. 

As a result, we added insert controls that appear right outside your table between two existing columns or rows. Just click on it when it appears, and a new column or row will be inserted at that location.

Screenshot of the UI that appears between rows or columns to quickly insert a new one

If you know you want more than one column or row, just select the number you want to insert and click the insert control on the edge of the selection—it’s that easy.

In addition to adding new content, an important part of working with tables is getting them to look the way you want. 

The formatting of the tables in your document can have a huge impact on how polished and professional it looks. To help you pick the right design, we’ve changed the organization of the table styles gallery so that you can easily pick between table styles that work well for presenting lists and those that are designed for data in a grid. In addition, we refined the table styles themselves—including adding a few basic black and white styles for those times when you want the table to sit quietly in your text.

Screenshot showing the Ribbon gallery of new Table Styles

While Table Styles can be a good start to formatting your table, they aren’t specific to your content so you may find that you want to make a few tweaks. For example, sometimes you want to outline a specific cell, or create separate sections within a single table. From user feedback, we know the current methods have intricacies that make the process seem more complicated than it needs to be. With this in mind, we created three new features to make the experience quicker, easier, and more natural.

Border Painter

First, we created a new tool called the Border Painter that is designed to make it easy for you to apply formatting to specific borders in your table. Just choose your formatting, then with the Border Painter active, click on any table border to apply the formatting. You can also click and drag your mouse to apply the formatting to a whole line.

Screenshot showing new UI for the new Border Painter tool

For those of you who have used the Draw Table tool, this is essentially the same thing except it doesn’t create new cells so you can apply formatting with confidence.

Borders Gallery

Second, we now have a gallery of pre-created borders that are designed to work with the new table styles. This gallery combines border widths, colors, and sizes so you choose everything with one click. Just like table styles, they will change color if you change your theme so they always match.

Screenshot showing the gallery of border styles

Once you pick a border, we’ll automatically turn on the Border Painter tool so you can go right to applying the formatting to your table.

The handiest part of this gallery is the recently used section that displays all the borders you’ve applied in the current session of Word. It’s great when you need to reuse a few different border styles.

Border Sampler

Probably my favorite feature this release is the border sampler (located at the bottom of the Border Styles gallery). I like to think of it as an eyedropper tool for table borders – all you need to do is activate the tool then click on a table border that you want to sample. It’ll capture the border’s formatting and automatically switch you to the Border Painter tool so you can apply it somewhere else.

I hope you enjoy the new features and, more importantly, find tables in Word 2013 more enjoyable to work with. Tell us what you think in the comments below.

Picture of the Tables feature crew members

The Tables feature crew is excited to share all this work with you!


View the original article here

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Webinar: Working with Office for Mac 2011

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AppId is over the quota

Office for Mac 2011 and PCs are working better together. In this week’s webinar we’ll show you Office for Mac 2011 including some features that make that possible.

What you will learn at Tuesday's webinar:

Outlook now on the Mac SkyDrive for the MacHow a Mac and a PC work betterWhat about the Ribbon?Cool Mac-only features

References for this webinar:

See more about our weekly webinar series at: http://aka.ms/offweb.

--Doug Thomas


View the original article here

Monday, February 13, 2012

Acrobat/Reader: Attach to Email button not working for PDFs referenced from long URLs

Acrobat/Reader: Attach to Email button not working for PDFs referenced from long URLs « Adobe enterprise product blog – David McMahon function clearSearch() {document.search_form.s.value = "";} .recentcomments a{display:inline !important;padding:0 !important;margin:0 !important;}adobe.com      Adobe enterprise product blog – David McMahon / Acrobat/Reader: Attach to Email button not working for PDFs referenced from long URLsby dmcmahonattach (1)attachment (3)email (3)url (3)  

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Saturday, February 11, 2012

Working with Nothing but a Windows Phone, Part 1 (Messages & Social)

AppId is over the quota AppId is over the quota .link_share { border: none; border-style: none; }img {border: none;} a.stbar.chicklet img {border:0;height:16px;width:16px;margin-right:3px;vertical-align:middle;}a.stbar.chicklet {height:16px;line-height:16px;}Office Casual - Working with Nothing but a Windows Phone, Part 1 (Messages & Social) Create or Link an account or Sign in using [f] [t] [in] Please wait... Create or Link an account It only takes a few minutes to join.

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RSS for post commentsPowerPointUnfiltered HTML Working with Nothing but a Windows Phone, Part 1 (Messages & Social) by on January 19

If you wake up in the middle of nowhere--or have to work regardless of the weather--you can get a lot done with a Windows Phone.  That's because it gives you lots of ways to reach people.  In this video I show you some of them --including how Windows Phone lets you text by voice, send group emails, and stay completely connected to Facebook. Watch:



In case you want to know more about the features of a Windows Phone, click these links:


 

Live TilesGroupsMe TileFacebook & Social NetworkingContact HistoryVoice CommandsLocal ScoutPin to StartAnd the three buttons that can get you to many of these features

Stay tuned, part 2 is next week.


--Doug Thomas

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other Microsoft blogs Official Microsoft Blog Microsoft On The Issues The Windows Blog Bing Community Zune Insider Major Nelson other product blogs Office For Mac Office Web Apps InfoPath Project Visio other Office blogs Office IT Pro Office Updates Office Labs SharePoint Information Workers Legal | Trademarks | Privacy Statement © 2011 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

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Friday, February 10, 2012

Working with Nothing but a Windows Phone, Part 2 (Office Mobile)

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AppId is over the quota

A restaurant can become a workplace using Windows Phone. With a built-in version of Office, communications software (Lync), and a way to access your files stored online (Office 365, SharePoint, or SkyDrive), you can see how to attend a meeting and even handle an emergency while eating your lunch.

How did I get into this mess? See the first part of the video to explore more about the Windows Phone.

Lync is an instant communications and meeting service for businesses. It offers instant messaging and conferencing with voice and video. Recently Lync Mobile has been released for Windows Phone, Android and iPhone.

If you want to know more about the features of a Windows Phone, click these links:

--Doug Thomas


View the original article here

Friday, May 27, 2011

How to uninstall Adobe Flash Player - working tutorial to remove your PC of Adobe Flash Player.


The Adobe Flash Player program is an important component of the Adobe Systems Group which focuses on the creation of multimedia software. Adobe has created popular programs such as Dreamweaver and Photoshop that was greatly helpful in improving the quality of images and photos. But as soon as users attempt to delete this application of the computer, many problems may occur. Some files that come with the program may be damaged or corrupted, will therefore very likely be left in your system because they can not be uninstalled correctly.

How to uninstall Adobe Flash Player.

There are two different ways to uninstall Adobe Flash Player, and it is the manual method or the automatic technique.

To manually remove the program, you must follow these steps:

Select "Start", click "Control Panel".
After the charge control panel, go to "Add & remove programs" or "uninstall a program" If your system is Windows Vista & 7.
This process will allow the applet add & remove programs appear.
From there, choose the program which must be deleted by the count of the list.
Proceed by clicking "delete". Instructions will be displayed on your screen and you will need to follow the specified actions to remove the program that you have selected to remove.
Using the program add & remove by removing applications does not fully take the program.

Some files will be lefttentIME, called "remnants of files". These files must be deleted from your computer by pressing "Start" and then find "my computer". Then, you need to select "C:\Program files\" and then find the remains of files. After you locate the files, click the folder and hit the keys "SHIFT + DELETE" on your keyboard. Restart your computer to complete the process.

Method of automatic deletion (recommended)

For people who are not computer knowledgeable and who think that the manual process is complicated, then this second method may be a good option. In fact, automatic method is one that is strongly suggested, so that you can use as it will remove not only the program, as in the case of Adobe Flash Player, but also completely remove all components and other programs of leftovers from your system. With this method, an automated tool is used; software more trustworthy for this method is the "Final uninstaller program. To use this tool, you can start by download final uninstaller. You must install on your computer and then clicking "Scan". A list of programs will be displayed and you must choose "Adobe Flash player". Check the box on the left side and select "Clean". Once the measures are carried out correctly, Adobe Flash Player will be removed from your PC.

The last but very important step is to clean the registry. The registry is a huge database where all the vital files, settings & options and the information is stored - including the remnants of files that may have been left if you used the manual method. ThetentIME registry is damaged, corrupted or infected, causing Windows to be unable to read the necessary files, it must function effectively. Problems and errors occur. To prevent this from occurring you can download and run a registry cleanup tool. In this way, you can be sure to resolve all the problems and errors on your computer and to avoid future issues.








You can Uninstall Adobe Flash from your PC using the tutorial and tools on our Web site. You can click here to remove Adobe Flash Player for your PC for good.


Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Boost your productivity of working with social media...?

You may find that headline counter-intuitive. The common perception is that social media are only updates posting, images, and connect with friends and family. If you have "social media" in your job title, you might think there is no way it can be part of the working day. However, social tools in the Office are to be adopted. In a recent independent survey of Rwandan professionals and students of age 18 and older social media under the direction of MarketTools Inc., 35 percent of respondents selected as an effective method of communication with colleagues, customers and suppliers. Some other interesting data points from the survey: 25% of respondents use social media to communicate and build relationships with colleagues. This figure was agreed up to 37% of the age group 18 - 24. 19% of respondents that social networking has helped to meet people who have made offline in valuable business relationships online. 89 Percent said their use of social media for personal communication increased or remained the same during the last Jahres.Es is no surprise that people use social media in their personal communication, but here at Microsoft, we believe that social networking can deliver real business value for all types of organizations. We have this with the social connector Outlook and SharePoint enable invested. And we have in cooperation with companies such as LinkedIn and Facebook. Facebook page superimposed on Outlook InboxHow can companies benefit from social networking? When used with a purpose, social tools in the Office with cooperation can help. Companies such as Getronics/Kpn and Catapult Systems have used social Outlook Connector professional social interaction and exchange of knowledge between the staff in different offices to promote that. James Sinclair of On-location advice used to build the social Outlook Connector and LinkedIn better business relationships and stay productive. James shared some thoughts with us recently: "Outlook of social connector (OSC) and LinkedIn work for me because it is an easy way to keep me informed of the people in my network." "I use this tool to interact with potential customers, employees and partners." "Nothing replaces face-to-face meetings, but OSC is part of my natural process of doing business, because it just there made in Outlook." "Often I find a degree of separation from someone I would like to do with business, and I use an introduction of a common contact, I discover by the OSC and LinkedIn."Of course we should take as for any communications platform, with social networking privacy and security to heart. With the social Outlook Connector, administrators can control and configure what networks with connect staff. Also, the social Outlook Connector users can choose which to bring social networks in their Inbox. He respects the privacy settings that have chosen users on social networks. The information that you see above your contacts depends on how much they have decided to share with you on social sites. Therefore, we have seen great examples of user acceptance of the Outlook social connector and social networking at work. You can to know you more, such as the Outlook social connector in this article on Office.com. I believe that social tools are a part of the workplace. With the right planning and the right tools, they can actually increase productivity. I encourage you to check out the Outlook social connector and think about how you use it in your company. Download the social network provider for Outlook social connector. Drop me a note, if you want to share your own experience! -Paco Contreras HerreraGroup product manager, Microsoft Office

View the original article here

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Working with Layers

Working with Layers « Creative Suite SDK Team function clearSearch() {document.search_form.s.value = "";} adobe.com      Creative Suite SDK Team / Working with Layersby Olav Kvern  

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