The A-word
Grok Headline matches for The A-word
Improvements in Word 2002/XP and Word
2003 for Legal Users
Improvements in Word 2002/XP and Word
2003 for Legal Users
02/01/2005 09:56 PMThis document lists changes made to Word 2002 (XP) and Word 2003 that
are of interest to the legal world. Changes listed include: document
stability and recovery; security; document management; track changes
and compare; formatting; and research.
Opening a Word Document Using the
Word.Application Object
Opening a Word Document Using the
Word.Application Object
07/29/2004 10:09 AMMicrosoft Word 5.1: The Apex of Word
Processing
Microsoft Word 5.1: The Apex of Word
Processing
06/18/2004 12:37 PMPDF2Office Personal - Microsoft Word
Plug-in to Directly Open and Convert PDF
Documents to Microsoft Word Format
PDF2Office Personal - Microsoft Word
Plug-in to Directly Open and Convert PDF
Documents to Microsoft Word Format
08/27/2004 04:07 PMRecosoft's PDF2Office Personal, a PDF to Word converter, adds to a
family of products addressing PDF document conversion. [PRWEB Aug 27,
2004]
Word Rage 2: New Word Order 2.1.1
Word Rage 2: New Word Order 2.1.1
06/01/2004 08:21 PMA challenging, fast-paced game of word guessing.
Word 2003: XML Toolbox for Microsoft
Office Word 2003
Word 2003: XML Toolbox for Microsoft
Office Word 2003
12/03/2003 12:40 AMThis toolbox assists the XML content author and developer working with
the new XML features of Word 2003.
The Word XML Toolbox requires that .NET Programmability Support is
enabled. For .NET Programmability Support to be installed during the
Office 2003 setup, the PIAs require the .NET Framework 1.1 already be
installed. It is recommended that you install the Microsoft .NET
Framework 1.1 before you install Microsoft Office 2003. With the .NET
Framework 1.1 already installed, a complete installation of Office
2003 will install all of the PIAs.
The Word Spy
The Word Spy
03/15/2003 02:38 PMWord Spy (recently coined words and phrases) .. heaven for word geeks
.. have compiled a list .. trendy lingo .. logophilia .. Wordspy - ..
WordSpy .. Wordspy .. wordspy .. Not
track this
site | 6 links
And The Word Of The Day Is...
And The Word Of The Day Is...
04/11/2005 03:31 AMA New
York Times' reader has this little tale to tell in the New York
Times city blog...
My 10-year-old daughter, Kate, is quite an
avid an dknowledgeable baseball fan. Recently, while she was reading
The Times, she asked for help sounding out a word she wasn't quite
sure of.
"I just know it's a baseball word," she said. I went
over to help her.
The world was subpoena.
How the Word Gets Around
How the Word Gets Around
05/07/2004 05:01 AMHow does a meme travel through the blogosphere? The Memespread Project
seeded an idea and watched it grow, learning a lot about information
transmission along the way. By Daniel Terdiman.
Ix-nay on the b-word
Ix-nay on the b-word
12/31/2004 06:32 PMXeni Jardin:
Not long ago,
NY Daily News gossipist
Lloyd Grove decreed his column a
Paris
Hilton-free zone,
announcing that only if "she discovers a cure for cancer, wins
the Nobel Peace Prize, launches herself into outer space - or even
gets her high-school diploma" would the shark-jumping heiress appear
again by name. Well, I've been guilty of a similar sin in 2004, and I
hereby pledge to go cold turkey on the word "blog" for, oh, at least
the next 72 hours. Today, there's news that dictionary publisher
Merriam-Webster named "blog" the "Word of the Year," and that just
feels like the last fucking straw. It's time for at least a temporary
autokibosh. There. Hear that? The sound of the b, l, o, and g keys on
my key**ard hittin* the **tt*m *f the trash can here in my *ffice. F*r
a few days, anyway.
LinkWord of the day
Word of the day
01/28/2004 01:32 PMStockphotopia: Where all those people you see in advertising come from.
"The new website looks great, but could use a few more faces
from stockphotopia on the index page."
Let Word Do It
Let Word Do It
08/31/2004 11:28 AMIt makes no sense, whatsoever, to think in terms of some mythical
"average" user. What does make sense is to think in terms of the
defaults that will satisfy
most users. By Rick Schaut (via
MyAppleMenu)
Word 5.1 Plus
Word 5.1 Plus
06/18/2004 08:50 PMIf you sit down with a bunch of people and ask them what they want in
a word processor, they start from Word 5.1 as the baseline, but
they'll, almost always, want something more. By Rick Schaut (via
MyAppleMenu)
one word
one word
12/02/2003 01:07 AMsimple. you'll see one word at the top of the following page.
you have sixty seconds to write about it.
as soon as you click 'go' the page will load with the cursor in place.
don't think. just write.
Say the word
Say the word
07/31/2004 08:27 PMUSA Today Aug 1 2004 0:02AM GMT
From Word to XML
From Word to XML
12/30/2003 06:31 PMIn the year's last Q&A column John E. Simpson discusses some of the
issues surrounding the conversion of MS Word documents to XML.
The S-Word
The S-Word
09/26/2004 08:53 AMDirect and Related Links for 'The S-Word'
“How Microsoft Hopes Its New Emphasis on Security Will Lead
to Global Domination Last week’s column about Microsoft’s
apparent effort to hijack the Universal Serial Bus specification
brought a yawn from the very Open Source partisans at whom it is
aimed. So what if it takes a weekend to reverse engineer the spec and
get those new USB ports running on your Linux box? Well, reverse
engineering isn’t what it used to be, and this…
"don't take my word for it."
"don't take my word for it."
04/18/2005 03:11 PMWord It
Word It
08/11/2004 09:10 PM
Word It is your opportunity to express in as many words, and as
many other graphic elements as you need, what best describes each
monthly topic. Each month we will choose a specific topic, idea or
theme. For example: the first theme was
“inspiration.” So you would go home, or do it
at work, and find words, images, artwork, whatever that best describes
what inspiration means to you. It could be anything: music, cats,
chocolate, museum, love, laundry. Anything that reflects what
inspiration is to you. You can do whatever you want to it: vectorize
it, photoshop it, scan it or build it and then send it to us.
A Word Of Thanks
A Word Of Thanks
04/26/2004 09:39 PMI just wanted to take a moment to give a big thanks to Raymond van
Putten for supplying our
European Photo
Archives with many photos of the Italian carded figures, beginning
with the Stormtrooper and ending with today's Sandtrooper. Be sure to
check out Raymond's site
InGenOps.com, a site dedicated to
Jurassic Park toys and news, and tell him Curto sent ya!
Getting the Word Out
Getting the Word Out
07/21/2004 07:32 AMDare Obasanjo: At this point I'd like to note that HTTP provides two
mechanisms for web servers to tell clients if a network resource has
changed or not. The basics of this mechanism is explained in the blog
post HTTP Conditional Get for RSS Hackers which provides a way to
prevent clients such as news readers from repeatedly downloading a Web
document if it hasn't been updated. The functionality is clearly there
in HTTP. The word is clearly not getting out to everywhere it
should be. Todo: Propose language for Atom that the Last-Modified,
ETag,
and Content-Transfer-Encoding headers that HTTP specifications
indicates
MAY be used in HTTP protocols, SHOULD be used in the case of Atom.
Update the feedvalidator to provide warnings when feeds are detected
that don't support these headers. This would apply not only to
Atom, but also to all flavors of RSS. I can't change the world, but
these two actions I can take.
Word from the Man
Word from the Man
01/17/2004 11:21 PM"craig vs
Hollywood" case partial victory.
"craig vs Hollywood" case partial victory
Hey, the case is over, and we've had a partial victory.
The entertainment lawyers agreed not to sue us, which we hear is
the first time
this has ever happened in a copyright case. Our
lawyers tell me this is a big deal.
I'm disappointed that the court didn't establish consumer rights..
but there will be
a next time.
More is available at the EFF site and in industry news.
I really appreciate your support, thanks! [craigblog]
Thank you Craig! We need people liek you standing up to our
rights!
Word Up
Word Up
08/17/2004 06:48 PMWord out
Word out
01/07/2004 06:05 PMJimmy Guterman in Business 2.0 (subscription
required):
2004 will be the year that blogs go
mainstream, although doing so will not have the liberating effect that
today's well-known bloggers are predicting. We won't enjoy some
avalanche of great new independent presses tearing down the media
monoliths or something similarly utopian. We'll just get ... more
voices. The volume of blogs will mean that individual ones will lose
much of their impact among the technorati -- and the technorati will
lose whatever little impact they're having on mainstream media. In a
world where millions blog regularly, pundits like Lawrence Lessig,
Clay Shirky, and Dave Winer aren't celebrities anymore. As with other
Net media (from Usenet to webcams), the old-timers will whine about
how the good old days were better, but the movement of blogging from
an elitist activity to just another thing we all do on the Net can't
be considered anything but healthy.
This year, the
broadcast television networks will bow to reality and start
accommodating TiVo (TIVO) and the new generation of Net-enabled media
appliances. Chief among them will be Sony's (SNE) upcoming PSX, which
will unite TiVo functionality, massive storage, Net access, and a game
console. The hybrid device has proven to be surprisingly popular in
its initial just-before-Christmas release in Japan, and there's a
nation of living rooms with too many knotted patch cords that need a
cost-effective solution. Using everything from product placement to
various forms of viewer participation, TV execs will finally deal with
these new devices and find that there's life beyond the 30-second ad
spot.
My corollary to the first one: Conceiving
the Net in static real estate terms "sites" that are "under
construction," for example will give way to more journalistic
concepts. Writing. Posting. Linking. Replying. Commenting. Answering.
Sourcing.
A whole new world of verbs and verbiage.
The War Of The Word
The War Of The Word
04/27/2004 03:55 PMI Spy . . . a New Word
I Spy . . . a New Word
01/17/2003 07:35 PMFor the citations, he uses Lexis-Nexis, Dow Jones News Retrieval and
Electric Library. He also uses Google and his local library. ...
ab ovo: Dictionary.com Word of the Day
ab ovo: Dictionary.com Word of the Day
06/25/2004 02:31 AMab ovo
Word Counter 1.4
Word Counter 1.4
12/12/2003 10:09 PMPerforms a word count and a character count on text.
yen: Dictionary.com Word of the Day
yen: Dictionary.com Word of the Day
01/16/2004 10:59 AMyen
Scripting Word
Scripting Word
06/25/2004 05:18 PMRick Schaut: "My more recent tasks have involved working with both the
Word testers and the automated testing group to iron out some ways
that we can improve on testing. In particular, now that Word has a
more complete AppleScript implementation than previous versions, we
can move from automated testing based on VBA (Visual Basic for
Applications) to automated testing based on AppleScript."
"Word Answers"
"Word Answers"
05/21/2004 03:49 AMIn the Beginning was the Word 97
In the Beginning was the Word 97
01/16/2004 10:58 AMIn the book
Mystic Microsoft, Kraig Brockschmidt goes even
further
Inside OLE, explaining the
"profound spiritual significance" of Microsoft's COM/OLE object
protocols. (01-15)
Does Apple need to get the Word out?
Does Apple need to get the Word out?
12/10/2003 03:09 PMPossibly the most used application ever is Microsoft Word. The de
facto standard word processing packing for most of the world,
Microsoft has done an excellent job of adding more and more features
to every release, making it harder and harder to compete against.
Because of this dominance, there is a peception that the Macintosh
platform is tied to Microsoft because of Word (and Excel), and many
feel that Word is what legitimizes the Mac and separates it from
competitors like...
The word syndication
The word syndication
04/14/2004 09:11 AMJason Kottke
thinks
we should stop using the word "syndication" to describe what we
do with RSS/Atom feeds. I disagree. He's right that what's
happening now online is different than the classic print syndication
model. But the concept of syndication has always been broader
than that. As I
wrote
several years ago in the Harvard Business Review (and before that in
Release 1.0), it's a perfect way to describe the emerging business
model of the Internet economy.
AbiWord vs. MS Word, For Now
AbiWord vs. MS Word, For Now
09/01/2004 09:38 AMWord for readers
Word for readers
03/14/2005 05:40 PM[See note at the end of this post] Microsoft Word lets you view your
document in several modes: Normal (=draft), Web page, printed page,
outline, and print preview. Yet there's no view designed strictly for
readers. That's too bad since many of us end up reading Word pages we
have no editing rights to. If Word added a Read view, it could have
special functionality: At the bottom of each screen would be Next and
Previous buttons Adjust font family and size with a click of a
button...and save your adjustments as a theme We could highlight text
and have...
AbiWord vs. MS Word
AbiWord vs. MS Word
09/01/2004 10:10 AMCounting the F Word
Counting the F Word
05/03/2004 01:41 PM Because you simply had to know, here's a site that keeps track of how
many times the F-Word is used in HBO's Deadwood. I've been watching
Deadwood and sort of enjoying it. There's some juicy acting in it
— I especially liked Wild Bill, but, oh well — and an
abundance of period color, but it suffers from sitting next to The
Sopranos on the TiVo list....
Word Clock
Word Clock
07/12/2004 08:52 AM
This probably
pleases me more than it should, but what can I say? I have a soft spot
for gadgets that think like I do. The Muller and van Dongen Word Clock
is a simple bar that eschews traditional digital or analog conventions
by telling time entirely through text. Instead of "12:00" you'd get
"Noon," or instead of "3:32" you'd get "about half-past three." It's a
pleasing way to take out the intermediate step between the cold, hard
numbers and the way most of us actually perceive time.
And as one of FunFurde's commenters points out, Mac OSX users can
add a similar function to their menu bar using "FuzzyClock."
Read - word. clock. [FunFurde]
Read -
FuzzyClock [ObjectPark]
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The A-word