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Opening Office 2007 files in Office 2003
Cycling through all your windows
Cycling through your open Word documents
Spice up your Word documents with Page Borders
How to specify the formatting for new slides in PowerPoint
Unprotecting an Excel worksheet if you don't know the password
Getting Google to Define things for you
Set the default formatting for Shapes in PowerPoint
Restoring a missing column in an Outlook folder
Repeat column titles on every page when printing in Excel
Display a table's headings on each page in Word
Creating the same footer for several Excel worksheets
Selecting a large block of text in Word
Previewing your PowerPoint presentation
How to password-protect your screen saver
Printing only the last four pages of a Word document
Change the colour of a worksheet tab in Excel
Use the keyboard to move to the next placeholder on a PowerPoint slide
Getting the most out of Home and End
Shortcuts to insert the current Date or Time
Shortcuts for working with borders in Excel
Bypassing Outlook's Deleted Items folder
Which Taskbar button do I click on?
2010 Calendars from Office Online
Be Safe Out There
In the last couple of weeks I've received several copies of a message that looks as if it is from Microsoft and claims to contain information about an update for Outlook and Outlook Express. The link in the email takes you to a web site containing the "update". Downloading and running the "update" will infect your system with a Trojan.
How do you protect yourself from scams like this?
- Turn on Windows Automatic Updates so patches and updates are automatically downloaded and installed
- Keep your antivirus software current
- Use a firewall
- Realize that Microsoft will NEVER distribute updates by email
- Do not open attachments or links from people you do not know
Be safe out there!
Any questions, please let me know.
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