Last week, we took a look at printing envelopes. But often people want to print labels–and then put the labels on envelopes, shipping boxes, CDs, file folders, jars of apricot jam, or whatever can be labeled.
If your document is just a little bit longer than one page, how can you shrink it to fit? We’ve seen customer questions asking where this feature is in Word 2010. Answer: It’s in the command well. And you can pluck it from there and add it to the ribbon.
Last month we made Windows 7 available to customers with Software Assurance and to MSDN and TechNet Subscribers. Today I am happy to announce two more ways for businesses to get Windows 7 for their deployment and evaluation.
You may have caught Brandon’s post last week looking at our SKU strategy for Windows 7. In addition to the guidance we provided earlier today for commercial customers looking at deploying Windows Vista, I want to also take a closer look at Windows 7 Enterprise specifically and what it means for our largest commercial customers.
Enhanced Profiles We’ve redesigned profiles! They’re clean and uncluttered. Now you’ll be able to see coworkers’ essential details at a glance, along with links to the groups they’ve joined and the files, images, and links they’ve posted. We’ve added profile photos for groups, so you’ll be able distinguish them visually.
One of the technologies available in SQL Server Analysis Services is data mining. We have just released a set of add-ins for Excel (“The Microsoft SQL Server 2005 Data Mining Add-ins for Microsoft Office 2007”) that allow users to take advantage of SQL Server 2005 predictive analytics in Office Excel 2007.
Today we have the first of two guest posts from Patrick Smith, a program manager on the Office Programmability team. Writing managed code against the 2007 Microsoft Office System products requires the use of an interop assembly.