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Archive for January, 2009

Send your Sweetie some Love from Silverlight

Saturday, January 31st, 2009

Heart

Heart

Silverlight

Silverlight

Let Microsoft and Silverlight help you build your sweetie a Valentine’s Day card!

Build your own Valentine’s card. Microsoft and Silverlight have created a website to help you build a Valentine’s Day Card. There are three options. Finish all three to send your Valentine’s email.

Silverlight Valentine’s card FAQ

Q: How do I create my customized Valentine’s card?

A: There are four steps:

Click on and login to either your Flickr or Windows Live Spaces account, then select the picture you want to put on your card.
Click on and write your personalized greeting
Click on and select the tune that best fits your greeting
Click on to send an email with your customized picture, greeting and tune. Note that the greeting will be sent using your default email application. You can then add text to the message and send to your love.

Q. I selected a picture and now I cannot seem to close the dialog, what should I do?

A. This is by design, select another button and the dialog will disappear.

Q. I have photos in my Windows Live Spaces account but I can’t select any, what is wrong?

A. You can only use photos that are designated to public consumption. If you want a picture to be used, define it as a public access picture.

Q. I selected many photos from my Windows Live Spaces account but only one photo is selected in the card, why is that?

A. The application only supports one image to be used in the greeting.

New Assets, Student and Task management Access Templates

Friday, January 30th, 2009

Access

Access

Access Team Blog has posted a plethora of new templetes for your business and working pleasure.

Click the link above to get the templete links on Access Team Blog.

Here are some of the new tweaks:

Some of the modifications include:

* Updated color schemes,
* New getting started screen,
* Video’s to demonstrate how to use the database and modify the database,
* Improved some of the database functionality to make it easier to use and more consistent, and
* Expanded the Students database to make it easier to track meta data about guardians relationships with a many-to-many junction table.

For example, here is one of the templete know-how:

the Task Management Database template.

Prepare the database for use
When you first open the database, Access displays the Getting Started page. To prevent this page from displaying the next time you open the database, clear the Show Getting Started when this database is opened check box.
Close the Getting Started page to begin using the database.

To make sure all the database content is enabled, use the following procedure:
In the Message Bar, click Options.
In the Microsoft Office Security Options dialog box, click Enable this content, and then click OK.
For more information about enabling database content, see the article Decide whether to trust a database.
Collect data through e-mail
You can collect task information from e-mail users by sending them a data entry form in an e-mail message. When users return the completed form, the data can be processed and stored in your task list.

On the Task List form, click Collect Data.
Follow the instructions in the Collect data through e-mail messages wizard to collect data from the specified e-mail recipients.
Search for a task or contact
The Quick Search box lets you quickly find a task on the Task List form, or a contact on the Contact List form.

Type the text you want to search for in the Quick Search box, and then press ENTER or click Go.
Access filters the list to show only those records that contain the text you searched for. To return to the full list, click Show All Records.
Filter the Task List
On the Task List form, you can filter the list of tasks, and save your favorite filters for future use.

Apply filters by right-clicking the form and selecting the filters you want.
Click Save Filter.
On the Filter Details form, enter a filter name and description, and then click Close.
Use the Filter Favorites box to apply a saved filter, or click (Clear Filter) to remove the filter.
Show or hide columns
On the Task List form and the Contact List form, some fields (columns) are hidden by default. Click above to read more!

Two ‘Points are better than one! Using SharePoint Slide Libraries in PowerPoint 2007

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

Sharepoint Powerpoint Slides

Sharepoint Powerpoint Slides

From the sharepoint blog: Like many who work inside of a large organization, I frequently find myself swamped in a deluge of PowerPoint files.

You, too, can create a Slide Library
Now let me get one thing clear up front: I’m not what you might call a “SharePoint savvy” guy. But the process for setting up a Slide Library on My Site was very straight-forward.

First, I opened up my profile on the corporate intranet. Then, I clicked Site Actions and then clicked Create.

Which then led me to this page …

On the New page, I entered in a name for the slide library, whether I want the link to this library to show up in Quick Launch, and if I want to keep a version of each slide after editing.
So now I have a blank Slide Library. Yay! But I hear some of you asking the obvious question “That’s great, but how do I populate the Slide Library with slides?”

Well never fear, because you have the option to either Upload slides directly to the Slide Library from the site (see the graphic above), or you can publish slides to your Slide Library from with PowerPoint.

To do that, open the presentation that you want to publish to your Slide Library in PowerPoint 2007. Click the Office Button in the top left corner, point to Publish, and click Publish Slides. You’ll then see the Publish Slides dialog box.

Select all the slides that you want in your Slide Library, and click Publish.

Then go to your Slide Library and you will see the slides you just added.

So now that you’ve created a Slide Library and added slides to it, it’s time to take it out for a test drive. Do you remember that Reuse Slides feature in PowerPoint that I mentioned earlier? That’s where we can access the Slide Library from inside PowerPoint.

To reuse slides from your Slide Library, on the Home tab, in the Slides group, click the arrow button below New Slide, and select Reuse Slides. Then, in the Reuse Slides task pane, click Open a Slide Library, navigate to your Slide Library, and click Select.

Windows Live Writer 2009: Now Available for Download

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

Windows Live Writer

Windows Live Writer

From The Live Writer Blog: We’re excited to share that Windows Live Writer 2009 is now officially available for download with Windows Live Essentials!

This is the same version of Writer as the release candidate from last month. If you’ve already installed the release candidate you do not need to upgrade at this time.

Windows Live Writer 2009
Version 14.0.8050.1202

Release Highlights (jump to full feature list)

Sharing photos and video
Here are some of the ways that Writer makes sharing photos and video on your blog even easier than before:

Crop, tilt and new photo treatments
Starting with the basics, Writer now has native editing features for photos - like crop and tilt - in addition to improved border treatments. The alignment commands in the toolbar now work with images so it’s easy to select multiple photos and, for example, center-align them.

To the right is an example of photo that is titled, right-aligned, and uses the “Instant photo” border (HINT: click the photo to see what happens).

Photo albums
It’s also much easier to insert multiple photos at once as either individual thumbnails or a Windows Live photo album.

Download HERE.

Full Feature List
In addition to the highlights of this release, here’s the list of all the major new features added since Windows Live Writer 2008:

New border treatments (including Instant Photo)
Crop and tilt photos
Insert multiple photos
Toolbar alignment commands enabled for images
Insert and upload Windows Live photo albums
Insert and publish video to YouTube
Additional spell checking languages: Arabic, Basque, Bulgarian, Catalan, Croatian, Czech, English (Australia), Estonian, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Malay, Polish, Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Slovenian, Turkish, and Ukrainian
Server-side tagging (for supported blogs)
Type-down filtering in the Open dialog
Twitter, Digg and Flickr Plug-ins
Improved blog account setup
Lightbox and Windows Live Spaces inline preview support
Improved category control: adding categories, type-down filtering
Tabbed view switching
AutoLink glossary
Smart quotes/typographic characters
Word count
Support for bidirectional languages (like Hebrew and Arabic)
Tabs for view switching
Updated look and feel

Try pptPlex from Microsoft Office Labs

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

pptPlex

pptPlex

pptPlex is a plug-in that explores an alternate method for presenting a PowerPoint slide deck. Using pptPlex, you can present your slides as a tour through a zoomable canvas instead of a series of linear slides.

Inside Office Onine, Nancy Buchanan, from Office at Work and Microsoft Office Labs bring you a new Microsoft Office Powerpoint plugin that will add pizzaz and jazz to your presentations.

As Nancy describes, pptPlex adds functionality to PowerPoint 2007 allowing you to deliver slides from a virtual canvas instead of one-after-the-other. Imagine that you were going over a presentation with a colleague and had all of your slides printed out and spread on a large table. With all of the slides visible at once you could easily pick up a slide so you could discuss its points, then put it down and grab another, or even hold 2 slides side-by-side so you could easily compare them. pptPlex gives PowerPoint this flexibility; you can move to and from slides easily with transitions so smooth that you can jump all over your presentation without ever getting lost. Learn more about pptPlex in this article, including where to get it and how I created a presentation about the planets in the solar system using it.

According to Office Online and Nancy, Bill Gates used pptPlex technology at the CEO Summit in May of 2008 on a huge touch screen computer. I’m not a CEO so wasn’t there in person, but have viewed the keynote online and can honestly say that with the exception of the huge touch screen, I was able to produce a very similar presentation with the same bells and whistles. You can too if you download the free pptPlex add-on. After you install pptPlex it adds a new tab to the Office ribbon.

If you use this, let us know how it worked for you. Even better, a linkk to the presentation would be great!

Cray CX1 desk-side supercomputer for your Small Business

Monday, January 26th, 2009

Cray Server

Cray Server

When Microsoft and Cray team up, everybody wins!

This dynamic duo is bringing high productivity supercomputing into the mainstream. Cray CX1 supercomputers with Microsoft Windows® HPC Server 2008 and Intel Xeon Processors provide “Ease-of-Everything” for new users of HPC for as little as $25,000. 3 easy steps to enter:

Register now!
Download the Cray CX1 and Windows HPC Server 2008 datasheet.
Download the free 180-day Windows HPC Server 2008 evaluation copy.

*NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. Open only to authorized representatives of US companies who do not manufacture, sell, or resell server hardware for use at high performance computing workloads. Game ends January 31, 2009. Winners will be announced on February 12, 2009.

SuperDuoSuperSweeps Privacy Statement

(Last updated: November 5, 2008)

Microsoft is committed to protecting your privacy. This privacy statement explains data collection and use practices of the SuperDuoSuperSweeps site (the “Site”) hosted for Microsoft by K/P Corporation; it does not apply to other online or offline Microsoft sites, products or services. By accessing the Site, you are consenting to the information collection and use practices described in this privacy statement.

Collecting Your Personal Information
We will ask you when we need information that personally identifies you or allows us to contact you.The personal information we collect includes your name, title, company or organization name, work E-mail, work phone, work or home address.

Use of Your Personal Information
The personal information collected on this Site will be used to operate the Site and to provide the service(s) or carry out the transaction(s) you have requested or authorized.

In support of these uses, Microsoft may use personal information to provide you with more effective customer service, to improve the Site and any related Microsoft products or services, and to make the Site easier to use by eliminating the need for you to repeatedly enter the same information or by customizing the Site to your particular preference or interests.

Use Brain Research to Build Better Powerpoint Presentations

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

PowerpointRobert Lane and Dr. Stephen Kosslyn posted an intriguing article on how to use brain research to built better powerpoint presentations. In you’re job or small business, you use Powerpoint, these are some great tips!

▪ Provide Detail: If showcasing a product, for example, have short video clips available that demonstrate its operations, along with pictures displaying various views, zooms, and environments. Obviously such imagery is especially helpful if the product is not available at the speaking location. Show and tell.

▪ Shape Emotions: You’ve been asked to give a talk about the dangers of tobacco use. A bullet list might do the job, but imagine the greater emotional impact provided by showing yellowed teeth, blackened lungs, and mouth cancers. Emotions can be powerful motivators and pictures tap directly into our emotions, at the deepest levels.

▪ Lay Down Context: You can provide a priceless benefit to audience members by grabbing a digital camera and documenting the environment and context surrounding your subject matter. Try to capture what you see through your eyes or imagine in your mind and bring that world to your audiences. They will relate to your topics and perspectives with greater ease.

▪ Simplify or Clarify Complexity: Those of you who present technical information are well aware of how confusing your specialty may be to people in related fields, or sometimes even to experts in your own field. Showing pictures, video, and animations to make topics more concrete will help viewers connect the concepts you express verbally with experiences they’ve already stored in memory.

▪ Give Examples: The phrase, “Here, let me show you what I mean”, is one of the most potent set of words you can utter as a speaker. It rivets attention in expectation of visual relevance, something the brain appreciates very much. Whether it’s warranted or not in this age of photoshopped illustrations, for most of us, seeing is believing.

(more…)

Work Less, Relax More in 2009

Saturday, January 24th, 2009

Time is Money

Time is Money

From TipTalk: Certainly, today’s always-on-and-available-anywhere technology can lead to addictive work habits. We’ve all seen examples of that among friends and family.

But having a cheap, convenient, 24/7 global reach through technology can also efficiently enable you to live the life you’ve always wanted. The choice is yours.

Here are some affordable tools and ideas that harness technology’s power to save you time and money.

1. Use Voice-over-Internet protocol phone service (VoIP) to create a virtual office.

2. Use online services for office communications and banking.

3. Leverage the power of a professional Web site.

4. Use your site features to stay in touch with customers.

5. Use e-mail software to track schedules and tasks.

6. Stop thinking you must do everything yourself.

7. Create a sales contact database for your business.

8. Invest in e-mail marketing that yields results.

Great tips to help your small business or home life.

Access and Excel, Together

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

Microsoft Access file

Microsoft Access file

Steven Thomas, of Inside Office Online Blog Sings the praise if Accesses ability to work with Excel files so much, he may even tempt me to transfer my Writing Submission Spreadsheet (which has taken on a life of it’s own) from Excel to Access.

In his article, he give three big steps:

System One: The things themselves

The system that held the files would give me data in comma-delimited text named as if it were an Excel file.

System Two: About those things…

Performance data about the articles was in a SQL Server database. Access talks to SQL Server, no problem.

System Three: The best-laid plans

Plans for new content live in a SharePoint list. Access, as it turns out, talks to SharePoint.

Ok, I have no idea how i’ll start my own process of transfer and whatnot, but it’d sure be nice to have a better format for that information than endless cells running sideways and up and down. With Steven’s accolades on Access and Excel working together, he gives me some interest in trying. If that is successful, I have another spreadsheet on recipes i’ve tried, with my own comments.

Think of the possibilies.

Use Free Excel Templetes to Manage your Budgets

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009

Microsoft Excel Finance Calendar

Microsoft Excel Finance Calendar

Microsoft has plenty of free Budget templets for Excel to help you manage your money.

Now there’s no excuse not to manage your money. Keep track of family, household, shopping, gifts, business, accounts receivable, accounts payable, etc., right from your home or office computer.

Templets available for download include 2009-2010 Finance Calendar, Event Budget, Family Monthly Bills Budget, Family monthly budget planner, Lawn and Garden budget, Wedding budget planner and many more.

With so many options available, there’s no excuse not to keep track of your expenses, especially in today’s economy, when we all have to start watching our budgets and pinching our pennies.

What budget templetes to you use? If you don’t, which of the budget templetes on the Microsoft Excel budget templete page interests you? And why?

About Microsoft Office

We’ll be discussing Microsoft Office products, the suites, updates and upgrades, tips and tricks. There are wonderful programs that Microsoft has come out with, especially Word, Excel and Outlook. There are programs for everyone out there, from home and student workers, small businesses and corporations. So, keep in contact, watch this space, as the saying goes, contact me with your tips, comments

Microsoft Office Author(s)

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