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Akmal Yousuf

ddressing the "Something Went Wrong" Error Message During Office 365 Installation - www... - 0 views

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    WWW.OFFICE.COM/SETUP BLOGS: HAVE YOU EVER GOTTEN THIS ERROR MESSAGE? MICROSOFT TELLS YOU, "SORRY, SOMETHING WENT WRONG," BUT YOU DON'T KNOW THE BEST, MOST EFFECTIVE WAY TO TROUBLESHOOT THE PROBLEM. www.office.com/setup Blogs: great way to rescue your PC now We know this error can be frustrating. If you've gotten the "something went wrong" error during an Office 365/Office 2013 (or 2016) installation, we want to help! First, go to this Microsoft troubleshooting article and run the "Fix it" tool. This automated tool will take you through a process of uninstalling Office so you can re-install a clean version. Tip: we've seen the advice to NOT use Internet Explorer to run the tool, but rather another browser like Chrome or Firefox, so you can keep it running even when other Windows applications need to close. Be sure to select "Apply this fix" when offered. Once you're done running the Fix it tool, restart your computer and try re-installing Office. Often, this fix will suffice. If not, move on to alternate methods: Check your internet connection. Make sure you're not on a limited connection and your router's firmware is up to date (to do this, you may need to check with your router manufacturer). Clear your browser cookies & cache and reset Internet Explorer settings. Make sure you've removed older versions of Office. Uninstall earlier Office versions from the Control Panel, or visit this article for more help: How to uninstall Office 2003, Office 2007 or Office 2010 suites if you cannot uninstall it from Control Panel. Temporarily disable your antivirus software. Hopefully you're on your way with Office! But if these solutions don't work, you can find more detailed instructions in this Microsoft support article. If you still need help, post a topic on the Office 365 Community forum.
Akmal Yousuf

Webinar: A beginner's guide to SharePoint Online - www.office.com/setup - 0 views

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    Office 365 for business allows small and large companies to use the power of SharePoint Online. In this week's webinar, you'll learn some of the basics and we'll answer your questions. Can't view this video? Watch it on Microsoft Showcase. Need a sneak peek? Here's a 30-seocnd trailer. What you will learn at Tuesday's webinar Logging on the first time What's that there? A look around Where can I put my stuff? Sites: for your company and your customer References for this webinar Office 365 for business (includes SharePoint) Video training courses for SharePoint What is SharePoint? (article) Get started with Office 365 business (video) Start using SharePoint sites, SkyDrive Pro, and Newsfeeds (video & links) Set up Office 365 for your business (site) What's new with SharePoint, a top 10 (blog post) New SharePoint mobile offerings (blog post) Sample SharePoint consumer site SharePoint Online for small businesses (index of articles) SharePoint Online for midsize/enterprise (index of articles) NEW: SkyDrive Pro App
webartist

Design Feeds - 1 views

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    A collection of design related articles, resources, comments and inspiration. Designfeeds.com.au provides easy to use and up to date information on anything design. From design inspiration to CSS and coding techniques, Designfeeds.com.au refreshes every 10 minutes and grabs new articles from a growing resource of respected websites.
pjsabatini

A List Apart: Articles: Power To The People: Relative Font Sizes - 0 views

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    As we learned in class the other day, a page must be able to handle smaller and larger text sizes appropriately. Some of our pages, mine included, looked like they were too small when the text was increased. This article, shows you how to change text size on your own. You may or may not need it, but it certainly helps to use it if you're not sure if your page will look right with larger text.
pjsabatini

A List Apart: Articles: Multi-Column Layouts Climb Out of the Box - 0 views

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    This article, written by Alan Pearce for A List Apart magazine talks about how to implement a multi-column layout. I want to use three columns for my Zen CSS page, so I'll be using this trick for sure. I hope it's useful.
Akmal Yousuf

Communications and collaboration in an information age - www.office.com/setup - 0 views

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    Part of the thrill of working for the Office Division is the opportunity to tackle thorny business issues on behalf of our customers while providing them with a road map for the future. That may be why an interesting article caught my attention this week. In it, the author examined some of the investments Microsoft is making in the unified communications space. While I didn't agree with all of the conclusions it contained, the article certainly underscored the interest in communications and collaboration and how to make people more productive. Communicating and collaborating with others is really at the heart of what we do every day. Whether at work or at home, people have the need to make meaningful connections with one another. Compounding that need are the realities of the world we live in where instant access to information is expected, friends and coworkers are scattered across geographies and many adults are juggling multiple mobile devices. At Microsoft, we believe technology isn't the problem to these complexities, it's the answer. We're committed to providing capabilities that help people make sense of it all and to do so in a way that is intuitive, barrier free and agnostic to the devices on which we rely. We're incredibly proud of the fact that our long term-term vision for communications and collaboration not only marries the best of the cloud and the desktop, it's a holistic approach that spans "from the living room to the boardroom" placing people at the center of everything we do. Our communication and collaboration vision comes to life utilizing client and cloud assets, including Lync, Skype, Yammer, Outlook and SharePoint. These tools are enabling enterprise social capabilities, HD video conferencing and document collaboration as part of a highly secured, reliable and extensible platform. At the risk of looking geeky, I have to admit that I have a soft spot for Lync and it's comforting to know I'm not alone. More than 90% of
Akmal Yousuf

Forms in SharePoint - Seven Ways to Create a Form in SharePoint - www.office.com/setup - 0 views

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    Forms are the cornerstone of business applications, and plenty of options exist to create a form in SharePoint. Which one you use will depend on your needs, technical skill and the version of SharePoint you are using. In this article we'll explore seven ways to build forms in SharePoint along with some of the pros and cons of each. All these options will be storing the data in an existing SharePoint list. SHAREPOINT LISTS Default forms are available for any SharePoint list. Create a list and you have a corresponding form to add and modify items. Options are available to organize the order of fields, format them, validate input, add basic calculations and attach files. There are also more advanced options such as limiting permissions to item owners and enabling workflows. You can modify all of these under List Settings for the list. These generic SharePoint forms are a good choice for simple applications that don't have too many columns or records and that only require basic functionality. Lists also offer a data sheet view to edit a limited set of columns, much like a spreadsheet. What you see is what you get with these basic forms. If you need to break fields up into multiple tabs, or perhaps have business logic run on them in real time, you'll need to keep on reading. And although theoretically a list can store millions of items, you can only access up to 5,000 items in any view (in reality the numbers are far lower before performance degrades considerably). Basic Sharepoint list form - www.office.com/setup SHAREPOINT DESIGNER Creating a custom form in SharePoint Designer is relatively easy. You take an existing SharePoint list and use Designer to create a new .aspx page which renders and controls the form. There are files used by a list to create forms, one each to add, edit and view. These are located in the same folder as their associated SharePoint list. With Designer you can show or hide fields based on certain criteria, change the layout, use va
Akmal Yousuf

17 Tricks to Master Microsoft PowerPoint - www.office.com/setup - 0 views

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    WWW.OFFICE.COM/SETUP BLOGS: START THE SHOW INSTANTLY We've all seen too much of presenter's laptop screens, full of messy icon-strewn desktops or unread emails, as they try to start a PowerPoint presentation. Get right to it by naming the file with a .PPS (or .PPSX) file extension. That's a PowerPoint Show, and a quick double click on it goes right into the slideshow, not PowerPoint editing mode. Click Esc to exit the slideshow. www.office.com/setup Blogs: There comes a time in almost every young (or old) office worker's life where the cubicle must give way to the boardroom, or worse, to the dais. That means speaking in public, and more often than not, that speaking is usually accompanied by slides. Such presentations are ingrained in the public consciousness, from watching big-name CEOs spew speeds-and-feeds about new gadgets, to fascinating TED talks on every topic under the sun. Even teachers in the classroom give lessons in a way the old blackboard could never convey. It's fair to say that the vast majority of those presentations are created using PowerPoint, the presentation tool that's a staple of the Microsoft Office suite. The site SlideNirvana.com estimates that PowerPoint is on at least 1 billion (with a B!) computers worldwide. If even a third of them use the software, that's still the equivalent of the entire population of the United States making slide-based exhibitions. And most of them suck. Perhaps that's not quantifiable, but so many articles are written on that fact-and so many of us live through them-it's hard to argue the (power)point. Likewise, many, many articles and entire books are written on how to make effective presentations. This is not one of those stories. This collection of tips is all about the vagaries of the powerful PowerPoint software itself. It's meant for those with a grasp of the basics and beyond who are looking for that extra little goose to get the most out of the program. We hope with these tricks-some of which wi
Akmal Yousuf

Summing data across multiple criteria on multiple worksheets - www.office.com/setup - 0 views

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    Liam Bastick has provided financial modelling services and training to clients for more than two decades. A senior accountant and professional mathematician, he has worked in numerous countries with many internationally recognized clients, providing and reviewing strategic and operational models for various key business assignments. You can check out Liam's previous articles at www.sumproduct.com/thought, where you can also subscribe to the monthly tips and tricks newsletter. Ever had to sum data based on multiple criteria situated in different Microsoft Excel worksheets? This article provides a quick tour of INDIRECT references and Table functionality while combining qualities of the SUMPRODUCT function with the SUMIFS function, providing a solution to the mother-of-all Multiple Criteria problems. The functionality is best explained by walking through an example: Ivana: Car Sales has four divisions, cunningly called North, South, East and West. Each quarter, the four divisions are required to submit sales reports detailing the month of sale, the sales person, the car color and the price the car was sold for. www.office.com/setup The question is: how can you determine how many red cars Charlie sold in February in total across all four divisions? The answer would be fairly straightforward if the data were all on one worksheet. For a single criterion, SUMIF would cope admirably well, while for several criteria, SUMPRODUCT could be used to generate the answer (for further information see my blog posts on the SUMPRODUCT function and approaches to addressing multiple criteria in one worksheet).
Akmal Yousuf

Communications and collaboration in an information age - www.office.com/setup - 0 views

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    Part of the thrill of working for the Office Division is the opportunity to tackle thorny business issues on behalf of our customers while providing them with a road map for the future. That may be why an interesting article caught my attention this week. In it, the author examined some of the investments Microsoft is making in the unified communications space. While I didn't agree with all of the conclusions it contained, the article certainly underscored the interest in communications and collaboration and how to make people more productive.
jschoen

A List Apart: Articles: Designing For Flow - 0 views

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    I know we should be recommending CSS tips and such, but please check out this short article by Jim Ramsey about flow in web sties. It's very akin to Web ReDesign 2.0 (for those of you who bought the book), which talks about the psychology of users - Kelly Groto and Emily Cotler both speak about the utter importance of a site that affords fluid, easy usability.
applejackie87

How to Use CSS for Search Engine Optimization - 0 views

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    This is a little bit of information on why we should even consider using CSS. At times wrtiting the CSS was very frustrating. If the CSS Zen Garden wasn't proof enough why we should use the "tool", this article will give you more insight to the benefits of CSS>
pjsabatini

CSS How to - 0 views

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    This is certainly one of the most important tools for designing a webpage. In "CSS How To...", for the W3 Schools website, this article shows you how to insert a CSS. Without a Cascading Style Sheet, your page will look like it came right from 1997. I will be looking at this page the next time I start work on a new web page.
jschoen

My Top Ten CSS Tricks [CSS Tutorials] - 0 views

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    This article by Trenton Moss instructs designers to use 3-d effects for objects. Apparently it's an old trick, but I still think it's cool to move a mouse over an object or image and have it pop out at you. Moss also provides the "Text-Transform" command, which is useful if you forget to capitalize successive h1 lines - it sets a standard for every h1 (every header will therefore begin with a capital letter, even if you forget to be consistent).
jschoen

SimpleBits ~ Clickable Link Backgrounds - 0 views

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    The site simplebits.com provides a tip on how to make background links, objects, artwork, etc. easily clickable. If I had the time, I would use this effect on my portfolio page, designing each article and zen site feature to afford some sort of action.
Bill Wolff

A List Apart: Articles: Faux Columns - 0 views

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    "Faux Columns" by Dan Cederholm of SimpleBits discusses "[a] simple way to make CSS columns appear equal in length, regardless of the content that they contain." This technique requires a good amount of skill in positioning elements on a page and understanding the nuances of the background image. Found at: Zeldman and A List Apart I'd like to try it, but don't anticipate using it any time in the near future..
pjsabatini

Getting Creative With Transparency in Web Design | How-To | Smashing Magazine - 0 views

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    This article, on the smashing magazine website, shows some cool tricks for working with transparency in CSS. While I am having all sorts of trouble with my CSS page, I am expecting to use these or similar tricks on my page. I recommend checking it out if you need help with transparency
jschoen

10 Quick Tips for an Easier CSS Life - 0 views

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    Paul OB gives probably the best advice I've heard yet - keep it simple. In this article he goes through the problems of complicated code, which as we all know can disable stylesheets and drive you crazy. After reading this, I went back through my css and made sure everything was streamlined.
applejackie87

csshowto.com » Blog Archive » From PSD to CSS/HTML in Easy Steps - Part 1 - 0 views

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    This article will help you convert your website designed in photoshop to a real css layout. For many people like myself who can't draw for their lives, I like to use photoshop and similar programs to plot out how I want things to look first. It is usually hard to translate my ideas onto paper, and even harder to translate the paper to a webpage. For those of you with troubles like these, rest them aside.
pjsabatini

Introduction to CSS3 - Part 5: Multiple Columns | Design Shack - 0 views

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    This article, written for the Design Shack website, shows how to code for multiple columns using CSS3. I expect my first site to have just two columns, but adding a third may be in the cards in the future. I expect to impement these ideas in the near future.
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