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How to Resume Right Where You Left Off in MS-Word

March 31st 2008 in Productivity by James Yeang Please leave a comment... (4)

documents 

Here’s a simple tip which will save you oodles of time!  Suppose you’re working on a long and complex MS-Word document which can’t be finished in a single sitting. 

When you get open up the document later - you don’t have to scroll through multiple pages to get to the part where you left off…

…Just press ‘Shift F5′, and bang!  MS-Word will bring your cursor directly to where it was before you saved the file, so you can resume work right away.

Fantastic :)

Get Your Tech Questions Answered at TechCzar

March 30th 2008 in Happenings by James Yeang Please leave a comment...

 qmark

Time for our monthly shoutout to our lead sponsor TechCzar :)

TechCzar has a column I find pretty useful called ‘Ask Molly’.  Here you’ll be able to find out answers to useful tech questions which cover many topics including:

  • Domain Name Tasting
  • NTFS vs FAT 32 Windows formatting
  • GNU Public Licenses
  • LAMP configurations

…and much more!

You can also submit your own questions if you like, so get some useful tips and check out Ask Molly at TechCzar.

How Sit at Your Desk and Take up Astronomy

March 25th 2008 in Web 2.0 by James Yeang Please leave a comment...

googlesky

Previously only available as part of Google Earth, you are now free to browse through outer space directly from your browser with Google Sky

Google Sky includes a number of different ways to explore the universe.  Select the thumbnail images at the bottom of the display to bring up the planets, the constellations, highlights from the Hubble Space Telescope, famous stars, galaxies and nebulae.  Other features available through Google Sky include:

  • Infrared - An infrared view of the sky from the Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS). Change the transparency of this layer by moving the slide bar to blend the optical and infrared.
  • Microwave - A view of the microwave sky from NASA’s Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP), which shows the universe as it was 380,000 years after the big bang.
  • Historical - The sky as drawn by Giovanni Maria Cassini (printed in 1792) showing the constellations in their classical form from the collections of David Rumsey

Two things I really like about this free service is that it offers

  1. Hi-res photos of some of the most best-looking galaxies out there so you can take good close-up views
  2. Quick one-click access to important and beautiful astronomical entities, because if you’re an astronomy newbie like me - you probably wouldn’t know where to start looking
  3. A search box, so you can jump directly to your outer space location of choice

Anyhow, looks like Google is indexing on all fronts… First the web, then the earth, the moon, planet mars….and now the rest of the known universe :)

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