Announcements
Wow - You're Making Our Shipping Dept Tremble!!
We can't believe the
number of orders that came in for our Norton System Works 2002 Pro deal!
If you missed it, we have this program on sale for $19.95!
It
includes the full versions of Norton Anti-Virus, Norton Clean Sweep, Norton
Utilities, Norton Ghost, Roxio GoBack, plus WinFax Basic! Anyone of these
programs would be a deal at $19.97, but you get ' em all! (note that this
is CD only - but all documentation is on the CD and you save $80.00 by
skipping the book)
Did you miss it the
first time? Then stop reading the newsletter and get to the link below
ASAP:
http://www.worldstart.com/store/syswks.htm
PS - If purchased
separately, this would be over $300.00 worth of software! Better hurry
though!
MS
Office 101
Ever been trying to
"think things through" and found that all of the toolbars, menus,
and other stuff plastered all over your screen were just too distracting?
One way to get the
"uncluttered" look would be to actually go through the view
menu and hide all the toolbars. That would be a lot of work and then there'd
still be some stuff left cluttering the joint up. And then when you want
to view them again, you'd have to go through that hassle again.
What a pain!
Want the ultimate
uncluttered look of MS Word or Excel?
I knew you would.
Simply go to the View menu, Full Screen option.
Bam! Everything is
gone except the document or worksheet, the top menu bar (if you don't
see it then run your mouse up there, it'll pop up) and a Full Screen floating
toolbar containing only a Close button.
Edit your document,
uncluttered style, and then use the Close Full Screen button to
return to your regular display.
Before:
After:
That's it - the ultimate
uncluttered look. (Too bad we don't have this one for the house!)
Office
Tip of the Day
Zoom,
Zoom, Zoom
Do you find yourself
squinting at the monitor trying to decipher the information on the screen?
Are you constantly using larger fonts for editing and then changing them
to an appropriate size for printing?
Wouldn't it be easier
if you could simply make the program display the information larger, like
the zoom feature on a camera? What I mean to say is, let's change the
way we look at the text or data, not the actual size of the information.
The good news is that
we can change the "lens" of the program. It's called Zoom and
it allows us to view the document at different sizes without all the extra
work of changing text size. And let's face it, in a complicated document
or workbook we could loose a lot of time with formatting issues every
time we changed font size.
We control the Zoom
based on the percentage of the actual printed size of a document. Printed
size equals 100% and from there you can increase or decrease size based
upon your need.
You can find the Zoom
feature in several different ways. One is to go to the View menu
and select Zoom which is the last menu item. Next, a
Zoom window will open with a list of choices for size of the document
or workbook displayed. There's also a custom zoom where you can enter
a specific percentage for display. Some windows will give you a display
example and some won't.
If you want to zoom
into the information, making it appear larger, then select a percent larger
than the current setting.
If you wish to see
the whole document at once you'll want to decrease the percentage from
its current setting. This allows for you to see more of the document at
once but often won't allow you to actually read the text if the percentage
is set too low.
A faster way is to
use the zoom drop-down list located on the Standard Toolbar.
Just click on the
down arrow and select a Zoom option from the list. You could also click
into the box, type the percentage number you'd like to set and hit the
Enter key.
Now that you've had
a chance to look at the ways to Zoom there's a couple of choices in various
MS programs that could use some explaining.
In MS Excel,
you will find the option of zooming the Selection or to Fit
Selection. This option will zoom straight into highlighted cells.
In MS PowerPoint,
you will find the Fit option. This will make a slide fit perfectly
into the screen. No messing with the percentage, it will do it for you.
In MS Word,
there are several options besides picking a percentage.
- Page Width
will automatically size the document to fit one page across the screen.
- Whole Page
will fit the document so that you can see one complete page at a time.
- Two Pages
will place two pages side-by-side on the screen to be view simultaneously.
- Many Pages will
allow you to click on the monitor picture and choose how many pages
are displayed simultaneously.
And, now are you ready
for the fastest way of all - the supreme trick of all zooming? I love
this one - so quick and so easy.
This is for those
readers who have an installed scroll mouse (a mouse with a little, scroll
wheel between the buttons that when installed, spinning the wheel moves
the document page up and down).
To zoom using the
scroll mouse simply hold down the Ctrl key and spin the wheel.
You should see the screen zooming in and out, depending upon which direction
you spin the wheel. Using this technique I was able to go to zooms from
10 to 500% in a matter of seconds with no menus or clicks!
That's it for now.
Zooming can definitely be helpful and make life a little easier on the
eyes. It's all just a matter of preference and you'll have to play with
it a bit to find what you prefer.
So zoom, zoom, zoom
away
|