1.Which of the following would you use to write a letter?
2.Which of the following would a teacher use to average grades?
3.Which of the following would a business use to keep records on customers?
4.Which of the following is considered a tool for desktop publishing (business cards, brochures, etc.)?
5.Which of the following is a presentation program?
6.The _____________ tab contains buttons for formatting a document such as bold, italics, and underline.
7. The _____, or typeface, defines the appearance and shape of letters, numbers, and special characters.
8.The paragraph mark (ΒΆ) is a formatting mark that indicates where the _____ was pressed.
9.In Word, the default alignment for paragraphs is _____.
10.Word includes a series of predefined graphics called _____ that can be inserted into a Word document.
11.To save an existing document with a different file name, click _____.
12.To erase a character to the right of the insertion point, press the _____ key.
13.Word is preset to use standard 8.5-by-11-inch paper with _____ margins.
14.To change margin settings, click the _____ tab and select the margins button.
15.Headers and footers can include text and graphics, as well as the _____.
16.The Word Count for a document can be found ___________ of the screen.
17.When a hyperlink is created, Word formats the Web address as _____.
18.Word, by default, places a tab stop at every _____ mark on the ruler.
19.Essential business letter elements include the _____.
20.In a business letter, the _____, if present, begins two lines below the last line of the inside address.
21.In a business letter, type the _____ at least four lines below the complimentary close, allowing room for the author to sign his or her name.
22.In the _____ letter style, all components of the letter will begin on the left margin.
23.To advance rightward from one cell to the next in a table, press the _____ key.
24.To insert clip art, you use the _____ tab.
25.To add a row to the bottom of a table, position the insertion point in the bottom-right corner cell and then press _____.
26.A(n) _____ is an example of a Shape.
27.The Shapes button is on the _____ tab.
28.The Insert WordArt button is located _____.
29. What does a red wavy line mean under a word or phrase?
30. What does default mean?
31.What is a work cited page?
32.Should you include a professional looking picture in your research paper?
33.How many spaces should be after each line in a research paper?
34.The printed copy of a document is called a ______ copy.
35.What is a footnote?
36.How do you insert a header?
37.An excel worksheet is a grid of columns and rows. The intersection of these grids is called a _____________________.
38.Begin a formula with this sign
39.This is the operator (symbol) for multiplication that is used in Excel
40.This is the operator (symbol) for division that is used in Excel
41.This function is used to find the largest number in a range.
42.This function is used to find the smallest number in a range.
43.This function is used to find the total of a cell range.
44.This function is used to find the mean of a cell range.
45.You have just finished setting up a formula and your cell contains #####. What is the problem?
46.To add a header to a document, what tab do we choose?
47.The direction this test is printed is called ________________.
48.By default, Excel has _______ worksheets.
49.A workbook contains ____________.
50.Columns are ______________ and rows are ________________.
51.Which format can you use to place your text over several columns?
52.To specify an absolute reference in a formula, enter a(n) _____ before any column letters or row numbers that should be kept constant in formulas to be copied.
53.A formula using _____ instructs Excel to keep the cell reference B20 constant (absolute) as it pastes the formula to a new location.
54.The active cell can be identified in all of the following ways except _____.
55.The _____ is the small black square located in the lower-right corner of the heavy border around the active cell.
56.The _____ defines the appearance and shape of letters, numbers, and special characters. To start a new line in a cell, press _____ after each line, except for the last line, which is completed by clicking the Enter box, pressing the ENTER key, or pressing one of the arrow keys.
57.When Excel follows the order of operations, the formula, 8 * 3 + 2, equals _____.
58.To save a saved workbook using a new name or on a different drive, _____.
59.Using the _____ button on the Home Tab instructs Excel to display additional decimal places in a cell.
60.To
Lol cheating on a test.
Go to Microsoft’s Office website unless they have it proxied out.
Please state the title and the name of the author.
How to Win Friends and Influence People, by Dale Carnegie. It’s a really old book but still good.
By admin in
business authors
Sep
2
We are starting a fishing charter business and wouldl ike to use popeye as our logo? I read that the character is in the EU public domain. New zealands copyright laws seem to 50 years after authors death, so it should be public domain, and free to use here? Thanks
mickey mouse is 70 years old and you cant use him so would contact the autors to check on popeye you dont want to be sued
I’m a younger teenager and I wrote a novel 300 pages long. It has a cliff-hanger ending, and I started writing the sequel, which I’m almost finished with. I plan to have a series sort of like the "Private" series (or Privilege) by Kate Brian, just in a different style. I’ve talked to Joyce Sidman and Victoria Kasten (both published authors) and they’ve given me advice on how to get ready. I’m curious as to how well my book might be if I’m younger. Would that help it, seeing as people might be curious, or would it lower my chances because I’m not as "experienced"? It’s (somewhat) realistic- fiction, and I’ve had a few people read it, they’ve all told me I’m good. Also, what kind of publishing companies would be good for a first-time author?
So, all ego aside, have you bothered with any real research? Have you even attempted to find publishers or have you been too busy getting your head inflated? Sorry to be so blunt but these kinds of questions irritate me. Instead of bothering with actual research you expect others to do it for you.
Start here:
"The Writer’s Market" or http://www.writersmarket.com
Also consider http://www.absolutewrite.com and http://www.writersdigest.com
Each of these sites will help you in learning everything you need to know about how the publishing industry works. From submission guidelines, to query letters, to formatting. Pay attention to all of this and then some.
Assuming your manuscript is edited and polished perfectly (self-editing and your friend who happens to be good at editing doesn’t count) then you can start preparing your query letters. If not, focus on editing and polishing first. An unedited manuscript is an unpublished manuscript.
Do your homework and do it properly.
By admin in
authoring business
Sep
2
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0810/41258.html
hey Vinne,
That is the whole article, what you want some misinformation, something your used to giving?
They are trying to do anything they can to keep the economy bad until after the election.
A 6-minute video review of Andrew McAfee’s book “Enterprise 2.0: New Collaborative Tools For Your Organization’s Toughest Challenges.” Covers book’s theme, the SLATES acronym, the use of different E2.0 tools for different types of ties between colleagues, McAfee’s cautions, and Model1/2 behaviors and how they connect with E2.0 platforms.
TRANSCRIPT:
I’m John Caddell from Caddell Insight Group (http://caddellinsightgroup.com).
We’re here today to talk about “Enterprise 2.0″ by Andrew McAfee. He is with MIT, used to be at Harvard Business School. Just switched over a couple of months ago. He writes an excellent blog on IT and business, that I’d recommend you read if you haven’t come across it yet. And so, he’s just produced his first book. To explain the title, Enterprise 2.0 is a term he coined to refer to using web 2.0 tools like Flickr, Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and similar tools in a business context.
The book is a lot like a recent book, “Groundswell,” that explained to general business people how social tools affected customers and markets and how to use those to communicate and listen. Communicating from inside the business to outside. “Enterprise 2.0″ performs a similar task, focusing on using those tools inside the business, more for collaboration and tapping the collective intelligence of employees. And so it takes this marginal topic and moves it to a general management-type discussion. Which I think is really important, to get it out of the IT discussion into the management discussion.
So as part of that objective he does a really good job of explaining how these tools work and also what ties them together because if you think about tools like Flickr or YouTube or a blogging platform or a messaging platform or a wiki there are a lot of differences among those but he’s tied together the common threads, using an acronym called SLATES (search, links, authoring, tags, extensions and signals). Signals, for example, like RSS that allows people who follow these platforms without having to log on to them every single hour to see what’s changed.
Another important part of the book is in putting the different tools into a context in terms of how useful they’d be for different organizational problems. He uses a bullseye metaphor focused on the strength of ties between colleagues to explain that. At the center of the bullseye are strongly-tied colleagues meaning people who work together in the same department, in the same location, all the way out to the edge of the bullseye. meaning colleagues who have no relationship at all. Different tools apply at different levels of the bullseye. In the center, people with strong ties would use tools like wikis, or collaborative development tools, like Google Docs.
Midway out the bullseye are colleagues with weak ties. People who know each other but don’t get together often, who don’t talk often, but would like to keep apprised of each other’s activities for the purposes of sharing knowledge, best practices, identifying solutions to problems, and so forth. For that ring of the bullseye, Facebook-like tools are very useful.
At the outer edge of the bullseye, where colleagues have no relationship other than that they work for the same company, a prediction market is a useful tool, that gathers people’s guesses about the possibility of certain things happening like a certain sales volume being reached or likelihood an innovation will succeed in the marketplace and aggregating that information to get a better answer than any individual would come up with themselves.
He doesn’t go overboard in terms of enthusiasm for how great these things are and how it’ll change companies overnight, and he has a pretty clear-eyed view of how difficult it is going to be to bring these tools to wide use. It just takes a long time -and he dwells on that at some extent – how long it takes for revolutionary innovations to take hold, and he doesn’t think this is any different, though he is optimistic that it’ll happen eventually.
And finally in the book he talks about kind of different management models or practices that work well with these tools, and by contrast he talks about typical Model 1 behaviors which are more command-and-control type behaviors, self-protecting behaviors and less-collaborative behaviors, which don’t go well with these new tools. To really utilize these new tools, people have to adopt what he calls Model 2 behaviors, which are collaborative, not so much focused on self-protection but looking out for the best interests of the company. Quite a different model than what most people have seen where they work. And I think that heaps underline the challenges in getting these systems adopted and in wide use.
It’s an excellent book, very well-organized and well-written. It takes an important topic and brings it into the mainstream. I really enjoyed it and I think you will too.
Duration : 0:6:10
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Technorati Tags: Collaboration, information technology, management, social software, web2.0
The contributing authors for the upcoming book, Guys Read: Funny Business, tell “The Joke.” Watch Jon Scieszka, Mac Barnett, Adam Rex, David Yoo, Paul Feig, Kate DiCamillo, Christopher Paul Curtis, Eoin Colfer, Jack Gantos, David Lubar, and Jeff Kinney tell “The Joke” and laugh!
Ghostwriter written and performed by Rjd2. Used with permission.
Duration : 0:3:15
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Technorati Tags: Jeff Kinney
By admin in
business authors
Sep
2
Dan Senor, co-author of ‘Start-up Nation: The Story of Israel’s Economic Miracle,’ discusses with CNBC how Israel has managed to become a leader in business innovation.
www.startupnationbook.com
Israel economy, Israeli economy, israel finances, israeli entrepreneurs, israel startups, israel hi tech business, intel israel, israel money, israel recession
Duration : 0:6:47
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Technorati Tags: intel israel, Israel economy, israel finances, israel hi tech business, israel money, israel startups, Israeli economy, israeli entrepreneurs
Google I/O 2010 – Launch your app inside of Google Apps with gadgets
Enterprise 201
Dan Holevoet
Gadgets represent a valuable opportunity to get in front of the many Google Apps users who use Gmail, Google Calendar, and Google Sites throughout the day. This session will talk about how you can write gadgets as natural extensions of your existing products and take advantage of the unique opportunities available to gadgets in Google Apps.
For all I/O 2010 sessions, please go to http://code.google.com/events/io/2010/sessions.html
Duration : 0:41:55
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Technorati Tags: #enterprise7, #io2010, Calendar, developer conference, Enterprise, Gadgets, Gmail, Google, Google Apps, Google I/O, googleio2010, ISV, SaaS, Sites
By admin in
authoring business
Sep
2
Writing an ebook or have you written an ebook that isn’t selling? You won’t want to miss this call! Alicia always brings the goods. So, mark your calendars and we will SEE YOU ON THIS CALL!
Teleseminar Headline/details: The 7 Biggest Mistakes People Make
Authoring An eBook And How To Avoid Them
Teleseminar Month/date: 11/19/2009
Teleseminar Time: 10 a.m. Pacific/1pm EST
Teleseminar Category: Business Growth/Entrepreneurship
Teleseminar Landing Page URL: http://www.theebookcoach.com/Alicia/
Host Name: Alicia Dunams interviews Ellen Violette
Duration : 0:1:15
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Technorati Tags: Alicia, an, Dunams, ebook, ebooks, Ellen, how, make, money, self-publish, to, Violette, with, write