Professional Documents
Culture Documents
The World Wide Web, abbreviated as WWW or W3 and commonly known as the Web, is a system of
interlinked hypertext documents accessed via the Internet. With a web browser, one can view web
pages that may contain text, images, videos, and other multimedia and navigate between them via
hyperlinks. Using concepts from earlier hypertext systems, British engineer and computer scientist Sir
Tim Berners-Lee, now the Director of the World Wide Web Consortium, wrote a proposal in March
1989 for what would eventually become the World Wide Web. At CERN in Geneva, Switzerland,
Berners-Lee and Belgian computer scientist Robert Cailliau proposed in 1990 to use "HyperText ... to
link and access information of various kinds as a web of nodes in which the user can browse at will",
and publicly introduced the project in December. "The World-Wide Web was developed to be a pool of
human knowledge, and human culture, which would allow collaborators in remote sites to share their
ideas and all aspects of a common project.
1 Go to the Table menu and select Insert Table. The Insert Table window opens.
2 Select the number of rows and columns you want in your table.
3 Select the column width (up to 22 inches) or choose Auto to have the column width adjust
automatically, making the table extend across the width of the page.
4 Select the AutoFormat button to select one of Word's preformatted table styles. The Table
AutoFormat window opens.
5 Click one of the styles in the Formats box in the upper-left side of the window.
6 Preview each format, after selecting it, in the Preview box in the upper-right side of the window.
7 To customize a preselected format, select or deselect the borders, shading, font, color, heading rows,
first column, last row and last column boxes.
8 Select AutoFit, and Word will automatically fit the table to your page.
2 Choose an "AutoLayout" format. Begin with the title slide layout, which is the first one on the left.
Click "OK," and you will have a title slide to work with.
3 Add text to your slide by clicking in the title text box and typing a title. Do the same thing in the
subtitle box.
4 Create another slide by clicking the "New Slide" button on the Common Tasks toolbar. When the
AutoLayout dialog box appears, choose a layout for this slide. Keep adding new slides until your
presentation is complete.
5 Move from slide to slide by clicking the button on the lower-right corner of the PowerPoint window.
Clicking the button with the upward-pointing arrows will take you to the previous slide, and clicking
the button with the downward-pointing arrows will take you to the next slide.
6 Save your presentation. Click the "File" menu and then click "Save As." A dialog box will appear,
and you'll be able to type in a name for your presentation. The presentation will be saved to your hard
drive.
Letters
Desktop Publishing
Newsletter in Word
With a variety of format and layout commands, Microsoft Word can manipulate text around objects,
add colors and borders with point-and-click ease and divide a page into multiple columns just like a
desktop publishing program. Custom graphics can be imported to a document from external files or
created with drawing tools inside Word.
Labels
Label Wizard
Microsoft Word comes with pre-defined templates for dozens of adhesive label sizes or you can
customize your own by entering the label measurements. A special label "wizard" walks you through
creating a new sheet of labels and printing them on your printer.
Envelopes