Site Meter Microsoft Office

Create a publication with Publisher 2007

by

Office Publisher 2007 has been redesigned to make it even easier to quickly create or open publications. You can create your own publications with the professionally designed Publisher templates, customize the templates as needed, and then change from one type of publication to another by clicking a single button.

Get Help with Publisher Tasks

Office Publisher 2007 contains a new task pane, Publisher Tasks, that includes tips for creating your publication and quick links to frequently used features, such as the color scheme section of the Format Publication task pane. Publisher Tasks articles provide step-by-step assistance to help you use Publisher to communicate with your clients and manage your outreach efforts more effectively.

Learn how to write effective marketing publications, customize a publication with your business branding colors and fonts, prepare a publication for your mailing list or e-mail list, track the effectiveness of marketing campaigns, and perform e-mail marketing.

For example, you can click Publisher Tasks and use the tips that you find to create a newsletter for your business.

Create a new publication
Start Publisher, and then click one of the publication types in the Publication Types list.

For example, click Newsletters.
In the Newsletters catalog, click the design that you want, choose any other options that you want, such as a color scheme or a business information set, and then click Create.

Note: For more information about publication options such as font schemes, and business information sets, see Create and change font schemes for a professional look and Create, change, or

To get helpful tips, click Publisher Tasks .

Note After you create or open a publication in Office Publisher 2007, it is listed in the Recent Publications list. The Recent Publications list includes the last nine publications that you opened in Office Publisher 2007.

Quickly create a different publication

Do you need to create several publications for the same business? You can create different publication types that use the same options and information — such as the same color scheme and business information set. You can also quickly change from one publication type to another.

For example, if you are creating a newsletter but you are interrupted to create a business card, you can click Change Template and then select Business Cards as the new publication type. The new business card contains your color and font schemes, your business information set, and any other appropriate information that you added to the newsletter publication.

Important If you convert a saved publication to a different publication type, be sure to save the new publication with a new file name, or you may overwrite your earlier publication.

Microsoft Details Massive Effort to Halt Software Piracy

by

Microsoft Announces Global Anti-Piracy Day to Highlight Collaborative Efforts to Protect Customers and Partners Around the World From Software Piracy and Counterfeiting

Microsoft Corp. today announced Global Anti-Piracy Day, a simultaneous launch of education initiatives and enforcement actions in 49 countries on six continents to combat the sophisticated, illegal trade of pirated and counterfeit software. The programs announced today include intellectual property awareness campaigns, engagements with partner businesses, educational forums, local law enforcement training, and new legal actions against alleged software counterfeiters and pirates.

Microsoft is taking these steps as part of its commitment to working with communities, national governments and local law enforcement agencies around the world to help protect its customers and partners and promote the value of intellectual property as a driver of innovation. An interactive map detailing specific legal actions and education efforts being announced today can be found at http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/presskits/antipiracy.

“Software piracy and counterfeiting is a sophisticated, global trade with a damaging impact on consumers, businesses and economies, and Microsoft is committed to working with others around the world to stay a step ahead of this illegal industry,” said David Finn, associate general counsel for Worldwide Anti-Piracy and Anti-Counterfeiting at Microsoft. “In partnership with national governments, local law enforcement agencies, and our customer and partner communities, Microsoft is driving anti-piracy efforts across countries and continents through an equally sophisticated system of business intelligence, forensics and education. Together, we are working to identify international connection points between software pirates and counterfeiters, to help stop them in their tracks and protect consumers and legitimate businesses from this illegal trade.”

“The global trade in fakes threatens consumers, businesses and the economy,” said Guy Sebban, secretary general of the International Chamber of Commerce. “It will only be possible to halt counterfeiting and piracy on a global scale through this kind of collaboration between governments and the private sector — both to educate people about the value of intellectual property and to take action against trade in illicit products.”

Global Anti-Piracy Day provides a 24-hour snapshot of the range of education initiatives and legal actions that take place on an ongoing basis in local markets around the world. For example, Microsoft today announced that it had partnered with the American Chamber of Commerce in Brazil to launch a new blog to raise awareness among educators about the importance of teaching young people about innovation and the high cost of piracy. In Turkey, Microsoft announced it is providing the country’s Ministry of Justice with training sessions on cyber crimes and their impact and has launched a Get Genuine campaign to teach customers how to confirm that their Microsoft software is genuine. In addition, Microsoft commended the Chinese government for its recent sentencing of two illegal operators found guilty of manipulating the Microsoft Open License program and selling unlicensed software to unsuspecting customers. In Italy, Microsoft began an employee anti-piracy ambassador program to educate family and friends through informal social networks. And in the United States, Microsoft took action to protect its customers and partners by filing 20 civil lawsuits in federal court in nine states against resellers alleged to be selling computers with preloaded unlicensed and/or counterfeit Microsoft Windows XP Professional and multiple versions of Microsoft Office software.

Too busy for email? Let the Office Assistant help.

by

Automatically reply to messages with the Out of Office Assistant

You can set up Microsoft Office Outlook 2007 to send an automatic response to some or all of the people who send you e-mail messages.

Important The Out of Office Assistant command only appears on the Tools menu when you are using a Microsoft Exchange Server account. If you are using an Exchange Server account, click in the Inbox folder, and then the Out of Office Assistant command does not appear on the Tools menu, we encourage you to contact a Microsoft support professional for assistance. An alternative method to automatically reply to messages is available for all Outlook users. Go to Automatically reply to messages.

On the Tools menu, click Out of Office Assistant.

Note The Tools menu appears on the main Outlook window. The main window is the same window that appears when you start Outlook and includes the File, Edit, View, Go, Tools, Actions, and Help menus. There is no Tools menu in windows where you create or view items such as e-mail messages, contacts, or tasks.

If the Out of Office Assistant command does not appear, an alternative method to automatically reply to messages is available for all Outlook users. Go to Automatically reply to messages.

Click Send Out of Office auto-replies.
If you want, select the Only send during this time range check box to schedule when your out of office replies are active. If you do not specify a start and end time, auto-replies will be sent until you click Do not send Out of Office auto-replies.
On the Inside My Organization tab, type the response that you want to send while you are out of the office.
To send auto-replies to people out of your organization, continue with steps 4 and 5.

On the Outside My Organization tab, select the Auto-reply to people outside my organization check box, and then type the response that you want to send while you are out of the office.
Note Organization is usually defined as your company and includes people who have an Exchange Server account on your e-mail system.

When the Auto-reply to people outside my organization check box is selected, the Outside My Organization tab displays (On) next to the tab name.

On the Outside My Organization tab, click My Contacts only or Anyone outside my organization to specify the people to whom auto-replies are to be sent.
Note The contact must exist in your Exchange Server Contacts folder. If the contact exists only in a folder that is a part of a Personal Folders file (.pst), the auto-reply message will not be sent.

Reasons to take your services online

by

Would you be surprised to hear that a new industry related to real estate, of all things, is taking off right now? I know I was when I read this Washington Post article about e-decorating:

Web-based interior design services are growing in popularity, even though the designer never steps foot in the room.

These services are faster and less expensive than the usual terms of a designer-client relationship, and they are largely conducted online. Clients typically e-mail photos of their rooms, fill out a questionnaire and pay a flat fee. Weeks later, sometimes sooner, they receive a customized design plan that can be implemented with pieces from retail stores and Web sites.

Cost-effective and convenient, Web consulting is just another example of the democratization of interior design, a luxury once afforded only by the wealthy. Fueled by an increasing number of cable TV shows, shelter magazines and design blogs, homeowners and renters of every income level have been inspired to put a personal stamp on their interiors. Web-based services not only encourage design, they make it easier to accomplish and allow clients more-affordable access to designers outside their geographical area.

“People now are design savvy. They want a designer, they want a designed house, but they can’t always afford one,” says Los Angeles designer Betsy Burnham. “Sometimes all they need is that master plan.”

In this case, customers can save on design expenses so they can put more of their money toward buying actual furnishings. For designer business owners, the service offers a way to reach new markets — customers with small projects or limited budgets — and to hang on to customers who may once have used full-on design services, but now are wary of spending that much in today’s economy.

So what can you take away from this? If you provide a personal or business service, such as organizing, personal training, or consulting, that normally requires meeting with clients one-on-one, think about creating an alternative, online-only version of your service that would offer scaled-back services at a scaled-back cost.

Consider the benefits: Instead of being limited to meeting with clients face-to-face during, say, 9 to 5 work hours, you can work on your online clients’ projects at any time. You save on gas and travel costs. And you enhance your online presence, which helps boost customers’ awareness of your business.

Is there a way you’ve used the Internet to transform how you offer your service? I’m curious to know.

More functionality added to the calendar page maker

by

Those of you who jumped on the calendar page maker the day I posted it quickly found a bug I had overlooked. Pages were created, but most of the time in the incorrect section, or in Unfiled Notes. Hmm. Something had gone wrong somewhere, and this is what I found.

From John Guin:

Going into Unfiled Notes is the backup - if the section you chose cannot be found (for instance, you chose the “Notebooks” name from the tree control) I decided to use Unfiled Notes rather than prompt you to go through the powertoy and try to figure out what was wrong.

The problem with them pages going to the wrong section was more difficult to track. First I tracked the creation of the tree control, and ensured I was getting the ID of each section. I was, but when I stepped through the code and tried to create the pages, the ID had been changed. This occurred only some of the time. If I had one notebook, it worked fine, but two notebooks (or more) failed. What was happening is that I only used the IDs from the first notebook in the tree (to make a long, tedious bug story short). After that, I got lucky. The “node” element of the tree has two text properties. One I used to display the name of the section (the “text” property), and the “name” property is where I store the sectionID. Now when you pick a section, you get the pages created where you want.

Another feature I wanted to add was avoiding creating pages on weekend days. I could not figure out a good way to determine weekends since they vary worldwide (and even job to job within a country), so gave up. Then “Sean” asked for the ability to only create pages for Thursdays. This seemed easy enough. I could give you checkboxes for which days you wanted, and you could eliminate the weekend days yourself. Thanks for the suggestion, Sean! If you download the new powertoy, you can now pick which days of the week you want.

This simple application is growing nicely.

I even localized (”Translated”) the day of the week names, so you get domingo, lunes, etc… for Spanish, and so on.

I hope this new functionality is useful.

Download here.

BEHIND THE CURTAIN: STYLES’ ORDER OF OPERATIONS

by

In Word, a style defines a set of formatting properties that are indirectly applied to characters, paragraphs, list, or tables. Instead of directly applying bold, then 14 point font, and then red to text, you can use a style to indirectly apply these three things in a single click. This is useful because you can quickly and consistently apply rich formatting, and can later change the definition of the style all the text the style is applied will change.

For example, the Heading 1 style in Word 2003 specifies the font, font size, and font color properties (among others) as: Arial, 16 point, and automatic, while in Word 2007 Heading 1’s font, font size, and font color properties are: Cambria, 14 point, and blue-Accent 1-Darker 25%. Because these properties changed Between Word 2003 to Word 2007, applying the Heading 1 style in Word 2003 will give you a different looking heading than if you did the same thing in Word 2007. And if you are not a big fan of Heading 1 in 2003 or 2007, you can change the font, font size, and font color properties in both versions and those changes will be applied to every instance of Heading 1 in the given document. Quick, consistent, and rich formatting that can be changed once and trickle through the whole document.

How styles relate to one another

You may be wondering how Word deals with all this style. I can get you 80% of the way there with a relatively simple explanation. The remaining 20% is more complex and less common, so I’ll go there only if I need to in later posts.

In short, styles build on top of one another. For example, if you have a numbered paragraph in a table, then the style layering logic in Word essentially works like this [Word is "speaking" in the example]:

“Document Defaults, tell me what properties to apply to paragraphs and characters by default.”
“Table Style, tell me how the table should look—i.e., row shading, borders, etc.—and if you have any additional paragraph and character properties (i.e., stuff not in the Document Defaults). If you have additional properties, I’ll add them. If you have any of the same properties as the Document Defaults—such as line spacing—but different values for those properties—such as 1 vs. 1.5—I’ll use yours.”
“Paragraph Style, do you have any additional paragraph properties (i.e. stuff not in the Document Defaults or Table Style) that I need to apply to this paragraph? If you specify the same paragraph properties as the any of the previously applied styles I’ll use yours.”
“Numbering Style, tell me how the numbered list should look and if you’ve got additional paragraph properties that I don’t have yet. Of course, if you have different values for properties that I do already have, I’ll use yours.”
“Character Style, do you have any additional character properties (i.e. stuff not in the Document Defaults or Table Style) that I need to apply? If you have the same character properties as the any of the previously applied styles, I’ll use yours.”
“Is there any direct formatting—bold, italics, underline, font color, etc.—applied? If so, I’ll use those.”
This story hopefully illustrates that:

Multiple styles can be applied to the same part of a document, so properties defined in styles are applied in a specific order.
The properties set by one type of style can be supplemented or superseded by other types of styles.
The general hierarchy of style types is [from lowest to highest priority]:
Document Defaults
Table Styles
Paragraph Styles | Paragraph Part of Linked Styles
Numbering Styles
Character Style | Character Part of Linked Styles
Direct Formatting

Announcing Office Podcasts on Office Online

by

Office Podcasts: A podcast directory with podcasts about everything from Office products to office politics.

From Inside Office Online Blog: I like to think of the new Office Podcasts as a cross between The Office (read: Steve Carell) and my office … or, maybe your office.

When I need a break, I can hang with the humor crowd and subscribe to David Salaguinto’s Office OFFline podcast or listen to a great customer interview with Steven Thomas and Cancer Lifeline.

If work prevails (how often does THAT happen!), I can find presentation tips at Ric Bretschneider’s Presentations Roundtable, or a demo with a face (thanks, Bob). And, if I’m having a day, which never happens, I might check out Melanie Jordan’s tips for creating my own job.

Check it out! Listen to or watch a podcast right now, or download podcasts to your mobile device. Subscribe to a podcast feed, and don’t forget to give us your feedback.

We’ll update Office Podcasts regularly as new episodes and new podcast series are available. And, if you have a podcast you’d like to see on Office Podcasts, leave them a link. You might just find your podcast featured on Office Podcasts!

Happy podcasting!

What do I need to play Office podcasts?

All of the podcasts offered here on Office Online are free. You can download them directly to your computer with your Web browser, or subscribe to any podcast series by adding its feed to your RSS reader. For more information about RSS feeds and readers, see RSS feeds and Office podcasts.

To download any Office podcast that interests you, simply click any of the corresponding icons in your Web browser:

The icon denotes an audio-only podcast that you can listen to in your favorite media player on your computer or on a portable device.

The icon denotes a video podcast that you can watch in your favorite media player on your computer or on a portable device.

The icon denotes a podcast that is available from the Zune Marketplace. Connect your Zune device to your computer and sign in to Zune Marketplace to be taken to an even larger catalog of available podcasts. For more information, visit the Zune home page.

The icon denotes a podcast that is available from the iTunes directory. Connect your iTunes-compatible mobile device to your computer and sign in to iTunes to be taken to an even larger catalog of available podcasts. For more information, visit the iTunes home page.

The icon denotes an available RSS subscription for a particular podcast (or podcast series).

Why use InfoPath?

by

You can use InfoPath to collect business data from the people whom you work with, including your colleagues, partners, suppliers, and customers. For example, you can use InfoPath to create a form template for expense reports for the people in your organization.

InfoPath form templates can be straightforward, simple form templates that are used by several people in a small workgroup. For example, a 10-person sales team can use an InfoPath form to informally collect and share information about sales calls. The data in those forms can be merged into a single summary report that is sent to management each month.

Alternatively, organizations can design highly sophisticated form templates that are connected to existing corporate databases or integrated into existing business systems. For example, the developers in your information technology (IT) department can design an InfoPath form template to manage the expense reporting process for your organization. The form template can include views (view: A form-specific display setting that can be saved with a form template and applied to form data when the form is being filled out. Users can switch between views to choose the amount of data shown in the form.) and business logic features that enable different categories of users to submit the expense report, review it, approve it, and reimburse the submitter.

The following list outlines some of the benefits of using InfoPath:

Wider access to forms If you use InfoPath and a server running InfoPath Forms Services, you can design browser-compatible form templates in InfoPath and enable them for use on internal and external Web sites. This lets you share business forms with a variety of users, including employees, customers, suppliers, and partners. Users aren’t required to have InfoPath installed on their computers to fill out a form, nor are they required to download anything extra from the Web. All users need is access to a browser, such as Windows Internet Explorer, Apple Safari, or Mozilla Firefox. If users do have InfoPath installed on their computers, they can display and fill out the form in InfoPath rather than a browser. You can even design your form template so that users can open it and fill it out by using a mobile device.

Read the rest of this entry »

About hierarchical discussions in Groove

by

To engage in a detailed exchange of ideas with other members of a workspace, it’s best to use a Groove Discussion Tool. A typical discussion includes a main topic with one or more responses, and responses to responses. Unlike a chat, which displays a running stream of responses in a flat view, a discussion lets you see the entire “thread” of a conversation in a hierarchical structure.

A hierarchical discussion is most appropriate for any content for which it’s important to maintain an historical record, and to present the exchange of ideas in a format that makes it easy for all readers to understand who said what.

Using rich-text features in the text chat editor

Unlike a message or a chat, a hierarchical discussion rarely contains time-sensitive content. Rather, a discussion provides an opportunity for a group of workspace members to introduce an idea, and then build and develop it over time.

Using rich-text features in the text chat editor
The text chat editor supports rich text features, such as text formatting, hyperlinks, and graphic images. These features are available only while you’re typing in the text-entry field. You cannot edit a chat entry once it appears in the chat display window. Right-click in the chat text-entry field to see formatting options or select options in the toolbar.

Using ink chat features
Right-click in the text-entry field to see menu options for switching between basic text mode and ink mode. Ink mode lets you draw chat entries by dragging with the mouse, and provides options for styling and editing these entries.

Note Changing the chat editing mode automatically deletes any content you currently have in the chat text-entry field.

The right click menu (and toolbar options in a Chat window or Chat workspace) correspond to the current editing mode. If you have Text mode selected, you see the standard editing options you see in all rich-text tools in Groove. If you have Ink mode selected, you see the following editing options:

Pen. Draw with the pen in the text-entry field.
Erase. Erase a drawn object (or part of a drawn object) by dragging.
Zap. Erase an entire drawn object at once by dragging.
Lasso. Select and edit a drawn object. To select the object, drag a circle around the object. You can then move or resize the drawn object just as you would in a Sketchpad tool. You can also change the color and thickness of the drawn object by selecting from the Select Color and Ink Thickness tools.
Select Color. Select a new color for a selected drawn object or for subsequent drawn objects.
Ink Thickness. Select a different thickness for a selected drawn object or for subsequent drawn objects.

About chatting in Groove

by

Chatting takes place in Groove within the context of a workspace. Workspace members open a chat window to exchange quick chat entries.

Although workspace members could chat about any topic, chat entries tend to relate to activities in the workspace. Typically, chat entries do not include content that members care about keeping. Rather, the content is administrative, perhaps directing members to start an activity, go to a location, or open a file. Chat is the quickest and most immediate of all the Groove communication options, and is therefore effective for sharing time-sensitive information, at least within the context of a workspace. A chat can also be carried out effectively among a group of workspace members.

If a chat contains content that members want to keep, this content is better entered in a Discussion tool, where it can be referenced later. Note, however, that although a chat transcript can be copied to the clipboard, no method exists for converting it to Discussion tool entries.

About audio-chatting in Groove
Workspace members who have the requisite audio equipment installed on their computers can use Groove audio-chatting features. Audio-chatting is the most immediate form of communicating in Groove, and allows a workspace member to broadcast to all other “in-workspace” members. It also allows a group of workspace members to broadcast simultaneously, in conference. Note, however, that the ability to use audio-chatting features may vary depending on connection speeds and bandwidth, especially with the conference feature.

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)


Warning: mysql_fetch_array(): supplied argument is not a valid MySQL result resource in /home/burn/domains/themsoffice.com/public_html/wp-content/themes/blue/sidebar.php on line 217

Warning: mysql_fetch_array(): supplied argument is not a valid MySQL result resource in /home/burn/domains/themsoffice.com/public_html/wp-content/themes/blue/sidebar.php on line 222