Technology
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When writing in MS Word, I often need to
change the case of my text from sentence case to
capitals, and I find it tedious to use the menu
system. So I've discovered a handy
shortcut! With the cursor on the word to
capitalize, hold shift and press F3, once to
capitalize the first letter, twice to capitalize
the entire word, and a third time to lower case.
If the word is already capitalized the sequence
works anyway: "Capital" becomes "CAPITAL,"
becomes "capital" in that order.
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This is an incredibly handy little program
(Windows only) that will show you the actual
password hidden in all those asterisks. If your
email program (or whatever) was set up ages ago
and you have no idea what the password is any
more, this program is your answer. And, there's
no charge for it at
http://www.lostpassword.com/asterisk.htm
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If you ever lose your menus, don't panic. You
can use your keyboard to get to the menus. Just
hold down the Alt key and click F. That will
bring down the File menu. From there you can use
your mouse to move around the menus. If you want
to use those shortcuts regularly, you can hold
down the Alt key and type whatever letter is
underlined in the menu title you want (E for
Edit, V for View, I for Insert, O for Format,
etc.).
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If you have a file that you need to open but
don't want to change (accidentally or
otherwise), you can open it as a copy or as
read-only. Instead of just clicking on the Open
button, click on the down arrow on the right of
the Open button. Choose the most appropriate
option.
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Are you making the most of the technology
available in your office? Do you even know
what capabilities your office offers? Do you
have desktop fax capability? Teleconferencing
capabilities? Do you know how to use the cool
organizational features of Outlook? When I
do individual organizing coaching, it amazes me
how much is available to employees that they
don’t know exist or know how to use properly.
Invest time in taking training courses to save
time long-term. Technology can be one of
the most effective timesaving tools; use it to
your advantage.
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Backup your computer's hard drive weekly!
Even if your IT folks are backing up your
company's shared drives, your hard drive isn't
included. If you save information directly
to the c: drive, you will lose everything if
(and when) it crashes. Schedule a backup
for a specific time of the week; say Friday
afternoons, so that you don't forget. As a
reminder, schedule them on your calendar.
Keep a large supply of CDs or disks handy, so
you don't have an excuse for not running it.
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If you use the Windows version of Microsoft's
Internet Explorer browser, it's not necessary to
type the whole domain name (e.g., www.yahoo.com)
to get to a Web site. Just type the middle part
("yahoo"), hold down the CTRL key and press
Enter. Internet Explorer will add the
"http://www." and the ".com" and go right to the
site, rather than doing a search on "yahoo" as
it does if you don't hold down CTRL.
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Sometimes you want to connect a file on your
hard disk with an appointment or a task. To do
this in Microsoft Outlook, open the appointment
or task and put your cursor in the Notes area.
Then, click on Insert menu and choose Object. In
the dialog box, click on Create from File, and
then click on the Browse button. Find the file
and click OK. When you're back at the dialog
box, click so there's a check mark in the Link
box and in the Display as Icon box. Just click
OK and you'll get a shortcut to the file in the
Notes section of your appointment or task.
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