2008-03-28 09:51 PM
Tomorrow morning I will be half of the presenting
team that will do a presentation comparing Microsoft
Office 2008 and iWork '08. I will be needing to share
a lot of links with my friends from Washington Apple
Pi, a Macintosh User Group that serves Washington DC,
Maryland and Virginia.
In looking for ways to present a lot of material in a
very short time, I finally decided to let some others
do the work for me!
First, let's take a look at the two applications and
what they provide.
No none can speak better for office than the
Microsoft Mac Business Unit. Head on over to view a
comparison of the three versions of Office 2008:
Click here
to read more...
2007-12-13 07:06 AM
I recently helped a newcomer to the world of word
processing. Her techniques were definitely rooted in
the days of the typewriter and applying the rules for
document layout that she had learned so many years
ago definitely made editing her documents difficult!
The first problem was centering a title. In
typewriter days students were taught to position the
carriage in the center of the platen and then to
spell out their title in their head, pressing the
space bar once for every two letters in the title.
Gosh, that sounds like a bunch of techno-babble. I am
not even going to try to explain it. Instead, lets
take a look at the modern universal sign for line
placement. This screen shot is from TextEdit.
Click here
to read more...
2007-11-30 10:33 PM
One of the really nice features of Mac OS X is the
system-wide dictionary that is available in all
applications that are written in Cocoa, Apple Inc.'s
programming environment for programming.
For you, the end user it means that when you make a
spelling error, the same database is used to check
the spelling of a word. This means when you add a
word to your user dictionary in an application such
as Mail, that same user dictionary is used to check
the spelling of the same word in TextEdit, Pages,
Keynote and a wide variety of third party
applications.
For example, each time I type my last name, Fauquet,
it is underlined with red dots as shown in the
illustration below.
Click here
to read more...
2007-10-09 04:54 PM
As a long-time Macintosh user, I have used AppleWorks
for years. For those who are not familiar with it, in
addition to word processing, Appleworks also contains
several other modules including both draw and paint.
Now that Apple has issued an End-of-Life for
AppleWorks, it is time to learn how to do some of
those special projects in the iWork suite.
My project for today is to make a decorative heading
for MacMousecalls.
Click
here to read more...