In earlier versions of Office, most toolbar items were not accessible via the keyboard. For a skilled keyboardist, this could be maddening! In Office 2007, every item that appears in the Ribbon is accessible using a keyboard command. KeyTips provide visual clues to let you know which key combinations you need to press to activate a particular Ribbon command.
To use KeyTips, press the Alt command. You’ll see three major divisions of keyboard shortcuts. The Alt + F combination will provide access to all Office Button functions. Alt + a letter will give you access to each tab on the ribbon. Alt + a number will give you access to each Quick Access toolbar function.
If you press Alt + a letter associated with a tab, a new set of KeyTips will appear when that tab is activated. Some KeyTips feature a two-letter key combination. When you press the appropriate KeyTip combination, the command you have selected will run, or a list of additional commands may appear. You can select additional actions from this list.
In some cases, you may want to programme a set of keyboard shortcuts. Currently, Word is the only Office application that extends this functionality. To programme a keyboard shortcut, open the Word Options dialogue box and choose the Customisation page.
Click the Customisation button. This will open the Customise Keyboard dialogue box.
Select the category that contains the command you wish to customise, then select the command itself. If you’ve chosen a command that has a pre-programmed shortcut, the existing shortcut will appear in the Current Keys list.
Activate the Press new shortcut key text box by clicking inside of it. Enter the new key combination. Word will display your choice and tell you if that combination is already assigned to something else. If the combination is available, click Assign.
Set the Save Changes In: flag to indicate where the new shortcuts should be saved. Click Close to close the Customise Keyboard dialogue box.
The keyboard shortcuts you programme will apply only to Word documents and VBA macros. They will not work in other Office documents.
Nov 23 2009
KeyTips and Keyboard Shortcuts in Office 2007
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Nov 22 2009
Harold and Kumar Review
At the South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas on March 8, “Harold and Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay” opened to a favorable crowd of 2,100. While the film premiered four years after the sleeper hit “Harold and Kumar go to White Castle,” the film opens the next day after their burger run. Harold and Kumar have planned a trip to Amsterdam to meet the girl of Harold’s dreams but due to a misunderstanding on their flight the duo ends up en route to spending life in Guantanamo Bay. After a vulgar but comical scene, the pair escapes (hence the title) and the adventure begins.
Schlossberg and co-writer and director Jon Hurwitz discussed the evolution of the film at the Drugs, Race & Politics: Harold and Kumar panel. According to the writers, the first film was not a box office success but DVD rental and sales skyrocketed making the film a financial smash. Yet, even before the film was successful, they had intended a sequel. Schlossberg and Hurwitz intended to make the sequel about Harold and Kumar traveling to Amsterdam but during the time they were developing the story “Euro Trip” came out. So they threw out some new ideas and eventually built the movie around the concept of racial profiling. An amusing one-liner in the film nods to this development. John Cho (Harold) explains that the politics in the film were a device, “to amp the stakes more than anything else. The film doesn’t have anything to say.”
While the title may imply a politically charged film, according to Kal Penn, the film is really about two friends. Hayden Schlossberg, writer, said at a panel discussion on the film that, “our goal is for the audience to be laughing constantly. It’s really about the vagina jokes.” Neil Patrick Harris, co-star, concurred by announcing, “there’s a great deal of vagina in this film.” Having not yet seen the film when I heard this, I thought perhaps they were being modest as the film overtly challenges American violations of first amendment rights. Yet after seeing the film, it is true. It is just a vagina film. However, with that expectation in mind, you can enjoy the film for what it’s worth.
Yet, what was so great about Harold and Kumar Goes to White Castle is that the concept was simple and fun. In this film the political backdrop gets in the way rather than enhancing the character development of Harold and Kumar. The film is quick to offend but is an equal opportunist, making fun of southerners to Cubans. However, rather than challenging stereotypes, the film reinforces them. This bitterly disappointed me. Just because they are traveling through the south, the duo comes across a KKK meeting and an inbred couple. Sigh. Where the film does challenge stereotypes is when Rob Corrdry (the despicable bad guy in the film, Ron Fox best known as a commentator on the Jon Stewart Daily Show) comes across a small African American community and in the spirit of “Borat” opens up a can of grape soda to try and get a guy to talk. The man, a soft spoken orthodontist, shakes his head in disgust.
However, no matter what weaknesses the film may have, something is compelling about the two characters Harold and Kumar. Even though the subversive humor of White Castle gets a little lost in Escape From Guantanamo Bay, Kumar (Kal Penn) and Harold (John Cho) are delightful. Their friendship development really is the crux of the film despite the romantic angles and travels along the way. The writers dug a little deeper into the past of Harold and Kumar and provides some funny insights into their friendship. If you are a fan of the crass humor, this film serves up loads of quick laughs. And while I won’t ruin the surprise for you, the pair do run across some highly important political figures with surprising results. This film is what it is and as long as you don’t have expectations beyond a quick thrill, you can enjoy the humorous dialogue. Not to mention, Neil Patrick Harris, as his semi-self is truly the highlight of the film.
The film opens tomorrow at the Oxford Malco Studio.
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Oct 03 2009
How to Buy Nine Inch Nails Concert Tickets
2009 will mark the last year Nine Inch Nails (NIN) will be touring in America. The NINJA tour features special guest Jane’s Addiction. Tickets are expected to move fast, and here are some tips for fans on how to buy Nine Inch Nail Concert Tickets.
One way to purchase Nine Inch Nails concert tickets is by being a member of the band’s website. Premium tickets will be available to registered members before they are on sale to the general public. NIN aims for their fans to have the best tickets available to them, and sales are on a first come, first serve basis. Each ticket will be personalized with your name on the ticket, which you will pickup at the venue. You will need to show identification before getting your ticket and entering the venue. If the show is sold out, check with the venue to see if “house seats” will be released.
Ticketmaster is another option for purchasing Nine Inch Nails tickets. Presale tickets are available often for internet orders before they are on sale to the general public. Ticketmaster also has information on the venue, such as a seating chart. Many tickets are paperless, but the option of receiving them in the mail and picking them up at the venue’s box office may also be available.
Another way to obtain Nine Inch Nails concert tickets is by purchasing directly from the venue. Many venues offer telephone ordering and direct purchase at the box office. Finding a retail outlet close to you is another option. Ticketmaster has retail outlets nationwide, and some of their retail partners include Publix, Kroger, and Macy’s.
However you decide to purchase Nine Inch Nails concert tickets, enjoy the show. The final tour promises to be an event no fan will want to miss.
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Sep 19 2009
Video Games Turned Movies
If you ever see the name “Alan Smithee” in the credits of a movie, it means the real director thought the movie was so bad, they didn’t want their name in it.
Gamers know that a lot of video games are based off of movies, such as Fantastic 4, Chronicles of Riddick, Batman, Superman–the list can go on and on. But what about movies based off of video games? How did they do? Below is a list of games turned into movies over the past ten years, how they did and a prediction of game-to-movie projects in the future.The first of these was Super Mario Brothers. Made back in 1993, it is a weak interpretation of the game in which Dennis Hopper plays King Koopa, an evolved dinosaur. There was not much of a plot line and the movie was an agonizing 140 minutes long. The audiences felt the same way too as the movie bombed in the box office. This however didn’t stop Hollywood from producing many more video game-to-movie adaptations such as: Final Fantasy The Spirits Within, the Mortal Kombat series, the Tomb Raider series and the most recent Doom. In 1995 the Mortal Kombat series was next to hit the big screen. Based much more on the fan based games it still had no real plot and seemed more like an old fashion kung fu movie then a big budget movie.
Next came Tomb Raider in 2001, based on the game back in 1996. This movie was a very good interpretation of the game, which included exploration, treasure, monsters and, most importantly, Lara Croft, played by Agelina Jolie. Jolie looked the part of Lara Croft as well as any human could, hence a huge reason the movie did well is that it had a watchable character and a good story line. Because of these aspects, the Tomb Raider movies set a new trend for future video game-to-movies.
Final Fantasy The Spirits Within, made in 2001, was not really based upon the games but more the philosophies behind the games, namely parallel universes and the existence of spirits. However the reason the movie lost $120 million dollars was not the plot but the GC animation. True, the character mapping and texture shading was revolutionary for its time in the film industry, but because of the use of CG it failed to induce emotion with the characters’ eyes and faces, which in turn equated to bad acting and a flop in the box office.
Resident Evil, in 2002, tried a different approach in its adaptation in which it tried to have many different subplots to capture the viewer’s attention. Did it work? No. The problem here was that Resident Evil turned into more of an action movie then a horror/thriller like the games where. The movie itself was really not that scary, had only zombies, mutant dogs and the Licker (the only real monster in the movie) so it is needless to say how this movie did in the box office.
Then there was Doom. Not the 1st of 1st person shooters, but it was the baddest. The Doom series has been scenario time and time again. You are a space marine on mars with a mission to close Hell’s portal along with a massive arsenal of weapons like the rocket launcher and chainsaw. One would think the producers could generate a decent script from the material in the video games, but I guess the producers must have been out to lunch because there was no reference to Hell in the movie. Instead it was DNA experiments gone wrong on Mars. Instead of killing demons, the marines killed zombies. Civilians by the hundreds were killed, whereas in the video game only monsters were killed. Another flop we will have to wait and see.
In Silent Hill a key scene is when the heroine is told to memorize a map and the directions are simply left, left, right, right in nature to navigation through a maze within the movie. What make the video game so popular was the ability for the player to make his or her own choices within the game, whereas in the movie there is only one choice when diminishes the games flare.
The Tomb Raider movies in this writer’s option were the only movies that really delivered decent acting and plot line and hence did well in the box office. Does this mean that all video game-to-movies are going to be horrible? No. In fact news has it that Peter Jackson is planning on changing that by doing a movie of the Halo series, we will see if he lives up to his promise.
For more articles likes this please go to http://www.gameznstuff.net/blogs.html
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Sep 07 2009
The Film Career of Orson Welles
RKO pictures offered Orson Welles what is often supposed to be the greatest contract ever offered to an untried director – complete artistic control. But then again Welles was no ordinary untried director – he already had the most admirable, innovative and inspiring of theatre and radio careers behind him. For his first feature he pulled Citizen Kane (1941) out of the hat, it is more often than not acclaimed as the greatest film ever made. It contains many technical innovations including the extended use of deep focus, low angle shots, pioneering special effects make-up and a layered and complex soundtrack.
Welles’ second film for RKO was The Magnificent Ambersons (1942) adapted from the Pulitzer Prize winning novel by Booth Tarkington, it made a loss as did his South American documentary It’s All True, Welles found on his return that no Hollywood studio would hire him. Eventually in 1946, International Pictures gave him a budget and he produced The Stranger (1946), however Welles’ most imaginative sequences were cut out leaving a very conventional film, it was successful at the box office but Welles swore that he would no longer play ball unless he had full creative control. He managed to gain what he wanted but his subsequent Around the World in Eighty Days (1946) and The Lady From Shanghai (1947) were financial disasters. Republic Pictures gave him a meagre budget to direct Macbeth (1948) but this too proved to be a disaster at the box office and Welles departed for Europe. In 1949 he starred as Harry Lime in Carol Reed’s The Third Man which was an international hit.
From 1949 to 1951, Welles worked on Othello, he kept having to abandon filming due to lack of funds when it eventually premiered at the Cannes Film Festival it won the Palme D’Or. In 1956, he returned to Hollywood, producing Man in the Shadow (1957) and Touch of Evil (1958) for Universal Studios.
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Sep 06 2009
Famous Movies Featuring Chocolate
Chocolate is an important force in the world, and in many of our lives. While we might not think about it on a day to day basis, we’d definitely miss it if there was no more chocolate to be found. In addition, chocolate has been important in several movies and books over the years.
The three most popular of these films are probably the two adaptations of Roald Dahl’s 1964 book called Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and the film adaptation of Joanne Harris’s 1999 book Chocolat. Here’s some information about all three of these famous movies that center around chocolate.
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
There were two adaptations of this book – one in 1971 and another in 2005. The 1971 adaptation is called Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, due to the then-association of the name Charlie with Communist Vietnamese soldiers. The movie starred Gene Wilder and was directed by Mel Stuart. It received an Academy Award nomination for the score.
Recently, another adaptation was made, directed by Tim Burton. This film has the same name as the book, and stars Johnny Depp as Willy Wonka. This box office success got a good reaction from the critics, as well as a nomination for an Academy Award for Best Costume Design at the seventy-eighth Academy Awards. The film was released in the summer of 2005, and has significant plot differences from the earlier adaptation. Neither exactly match the plot of the book.
In this movie Willy Wonka was choosing a new owner for the factory. He did this through selling candy bars with golden tickets inside. One of the people who received the tickets was Charlie, a boy from a poor family. Once arriving at the factory the winners are dazzled by wondrous candy creations such as the chocolate river. A girl eventually winds up trying to drink from the river and accidentally falls in to her parents horror. By the end of the movie Charlie who has a deep appreciation for people and kindness is the winner.
Chocolat
Chocolat was first written in 1999, then adapted for film in 2000. This successful film pulled in more than $150,000,000 around the world, and received Golden Globe and Academy Award Nominations for Best Original Score, Best Actress and Best Picture. The film tells the story of a young mother who comes to a fictional French village with her young daughter and opens a small chocolate shop.
The chocolate she produces changes the lives of the people she lives around. There’s a great deal of strife between the woman and the village, starting with the fact that she opens her shop during Lent. However, her confections eventually encourage secret love, help a married couple, and help a woman leave her abusive husband.
We all love chocolate, and box office figures show that we also love movies about chocolate. If you’re feeling that craving, why not check out a chocolate-based film and enjoy it with a brownie, truffle, or scoop of chocolate ice cream?
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Aug 31 2009
The Dark Knight
The Dark Knight is one of the most talked about movies of the summer, and is expected to bomb the box office with its debut this July. The film is welcomed as the follow-up to Batman Returns, and has a cast that is guaranteed to turn heads. Christian Bale, Heath Ledger and Maggie Gyllenhall are just a few of the actors that make up the cast, but all are proven to be extraordinarily talented enough to draw-in excellent reviews from the critics who previewed the movie. The film is also the last film that features Heath Ledger, who died last year. The movie is, like the other Batman movies, based on the Batman comic series that emphasizes action, adventure and romance in the dark city of Gotham.
For fans both new and old alike, The Dark Knight is a movie that has been acclaimed for its action packed scenes and new storyline. The Joker in the newest tale of Gotham is one of the most horrible villains of the entire Batman series, guaranteed to give even the staunchest viewers a shiver when you see him on the big screen. Batman himself is played by Christian Bale, who also starred in American Psycho and The Machinist. The newest Batman movie is perhaps the best Batman movie yet, and is a good movie to see even for those of us who are not Batman fans. Batman has been a staple in American entertainment for over a decade, but this modern version of an old classic is definitely a must see for this year that showcases the iconic character of the Batman and the Joker. If you are a Batman fan, this goes double for you!
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Aug 11 2009
The Wizard of Oz – Will the 2011 Remake Have Box Office Success?
The 1939 production – The Wizard of Oz – can truly be considered one of the most popular movies of all time. In its 70+ years of existence it has been watched by millions, if not even billions of people all over the world being broadcast almost continuously on TV stations and in cinemas. Few, if any, of the initial producers and actors would have dreamed that the movie will be successful to this tremendous degree.
At the time of its release it won 2 Academy Awards but in the years to come the movie kept getting praises form movie lovers and from movie critics alike. It has even been named as the movie with the greatest sound tack in history by The Observer.
With all the success to look up to, a new movie based on Baum’s original publication The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is planned for 2011. Although it is not considered to be a remake of the 1939 production, it will inevitably have many similarities with it and the public will most likely compare the two productions.
This being said, it is an obvious conclusion that the new release will have the bar set up very high and along with it the public’s expectations will also be at the same level. It remains to be seen if it will have remarkable success at the box office.
One fact is for sure though: the future production will greatly benefit from the success of the previous one. Having millions of true fans already is a huge advantage for any new movie. Thus, even if it will turn out to be a mediocre film, the production houses profits will be huge.
Until the new release, old fans can watch the 1939 production a few times over or they can tend to their collections of items related to the movie.
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Jul 11 2009
Shoe Storage Ideas – Thinking Outside the Shoe Box
Sometimes finding space for shoe storage simply means using space you already have, knowing what products are available and being creative… “thinking outside the shoe box” if you will.
How much space do you have?
You need to have good measurements for your closet or entryway.
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Jun 08 2009
Green Office Supplies; The Competitive Edge
Many companies these days are getting on the Green bandwagon. If a company is marketing their products or services as being environmentally friendly, they sometimes scramble to find office supplies that back up their message. Turning to the big box office supply companies doesn’t always give you the best selection of recycled office products. Most companies find what they are looking for at smaller “Mom & Pop” type office supply stores; which are few and far between these days. These smaller stores know that they have to provide better competitive advantage to their larger competitor that will beat them almost every time on price. Some of these small office supply stores have turned to environmentally friendly office supplies to maintain that edge.
There are some great recycled papers that have a higher post consumer recycled content than what the bigger companies are carrying. Living Tree Paper out of Eugene, Oregon has some great papers that are 90% recycled and 10% Hemp/Flax. We are starting to see pencils made of recycled paper. One of the biggest problems has been with vinyl. Vinyl or PVC is a petroleum based product that is toxic to manufacture and dispose. When your binder’s rings bend or your cover rips, it’s off to the landfill where it will be thousands of years before that material can break down. Manufacturers really need to think through the impact their materials have on the environment. There are many materials like corrugated cardboard, non toxic chip board, recycled bending chip and even bioplastics that would make excellent materials for office supplies and recycled binders.
Office supply stores that carry these types of products will give them the competitive edge over their competition, as well as, give them the satisfaction that they are doing their part for the environment.
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