www.office.com/setup Blogs: PowerPoint allows you to insert a video onto a slide and play it during your presentation. This is a great way to make your presentation more engaging for your audience.
You can even edit the video within PowerPoint and customize its appearance. For example, you can trim the video's length, add a fade in, and much more.
Optional: Download our practice presentation.
Watch the video below to learn more about inserting videos in PowerPoint.
TO INSERT A VIDEO FROM A FILE:
In our example, we'll insert a video from a file saved locally on our computer. If you'd like to work along with our example, right-click this link to our example video and save it to your computer.
From the Insert tab, click the Video drop-down arrow, then select Video on My PC.
Inserting a video from a file - www.office.com/setup
Locate and select the desired video file, then click Insert.
Selecting a video to insert - www.office.com/setup
The video will be added to the slide.
The inserted video - www.office.com/setup
With the Screen Recording feature on the Insert tab, you can create a video of anything you are doing on your computer and insert it into a slide.
the Screen Recording button on the Insert tab - www.office.com/setup
TO INSERT AN ONLINE VIDEO:
Some websites-like YouTube-allow you to embed videos into your slides. An embedded video will still be hosted on its original website, meaning the video itself won't be added to your file. Embedding can be a convenient way to reduce the file size of your presentation, but you'll also need to be connected to the Internet for the video to play.
Inserting an online video - www.office.com/setup
WORKING WITH VIDEOS
TO PREVIEW A VIDEO:
Click a video to select it.
Click the Play/Pause button below the video. The video will begin playing, and the timeline next to the Play/Pause button will advance.
The Play/Pause button and the timeline - www.office.com/setup
To jump to a different part of the video, click anywhe
How to Use the New Microsoft Forms - www.office.com/setupwww.office.com/setup Blogs: Have you seen the new Microsoft Forms? One of the most popular articles on my blog in the last 12 months was related to its predecessor - Excel Surveys. Not only did that post get a lot of views, but it also got a lot of comments from people with questions about the features of Excel Surveys, or more importantly for some, the features it did not have. You can still use Excel Surveys, but Microsoft are in the process of transitioning to something better - Microsoft Forms. This version includes automatic grading and built-in student feedback. Here's what you need to know.
GETTING STARTED
You can find the homepage for Microsoft Forms by going to forms.office.com, or you may see Forms listed in the Office 365 App Launcher. Both links go to the same place. Technically, Forms is still in Preview but you can sign in with your Office 365 Education account today and start creating surveys and quizzes. The new Microsoft Forms work on desktop and mobile browsers.
Once you are logged in, click the New button to create your first form. Replace Untitled Form with a title of your choice, and add a description underneath if you want to provide any directions or information for students or parents who are filling out your Form.
BUILDING A FORM
Tapping the Add Question button gives you access to the question types that are available to you in this new version of Microsoft Forms. The options include:
Choice: for creating multiple choice questions! Tap or click the slider to allow people to select multiple answers. You can also tap or click the ellipses button to shuffle answers.
Quiz: a multiple choice question that you allows you to select a correct answer for automatic grading. Tapping the comment icon on each answer choice lets you add student feedback for each selection. Multiple answers and shuffled answers are also available to you when working on Quiz questions.
Text: to collect
www.office.com/setup Blogs: Evernote and OneNote are two of our favorite tools, but both have changed substantially since we last compared these two apps-in some ways, not for the best. Here's where these two stand today.
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LIFEHACKER FACEOFF: ONENOTE VS. EVERNOTE
Now that Microsoft OneNote is free for Mac and Windows, the price and cross-platform barriers to…Read more
WHAT'S NEW IN EVERNOTE
In the last year, Evernote introduced a new pricing plan, redesigned its webapp, and added new features for its Android and iOS apps.
THE FREE PLAN LOSES A FEATURE, BUT NOW THERE'S A MORE AFFORDABLE PAID PLAN
Let's talk price first with Evernote, since it's the biggest change in the last year. The free plan no longer lets you email notes to Evernote, something most users enjoyed and used often prior to that change. Although you can get around this limitation with an IFTTT recipe, you won't get the full flexibility of Evernote's email-to-notes feature, such as specifying your destination notebook in the email subject line. So that's a bummer.
On the positive side, however, Evernote introduced a new, more affordable paid plan called Evernote Plus. For $25 a year, you get offline notebooks for Evernote's mobile apps and the ability to lock the app on your phone with a PIN. Both of these used to require Evernote's Premium plan, which used to cost $45 a year.
Finally, Evernote's Premium plan now costs $50 a year. But in return for those five extra bucks, you get larger upload limits: 10GB a month, instead of the previous 4GB data cap. With Evernote Premium, you can search attachments, scan business cards, view previous note versions, annotate PDFs, and use the new note presentation mode.
EVERNOTE'S USER INTERFACE KEEPS EVOLVING
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Last year, Evernote took its redesigned, minimalist web client out of beta. Though slicker and easier on the eyes, the makeover also made the webapp less functional. You can't order