We have updated our website with some new Categories. You can now register on our website and get email alerts based on these categories.
To Register
To Get Email alerts
We have updated our website with some new Categories. You can now register on our website and get email alerts based on these categories.
To Register
To Get Email alerts
Over 1 Million people have downloaded the Office 2010 beta, Have you?
I have been using the beta, and before then the Tech Preview version. I have been real happy with the new features, and the Ribbon in outlook is great. We had one PC at our last event that had it installed on it and people were spending a lot of time checking it out. So, you should check it out too!
Official Microsoft Site (Also where Download it)
www.microsoft.com/2010
Offical Blog for Office 2010
http://blogs.technet.com/office2010/default.aspx
Here’s an interesting historical question – when we say Out of Office, why does it sometimes get shortened to ‘OOF’? Shouldn’t it be ‘OOO’?
Inside Microsoft, ‘OOF’ means not just the message which says you’re Out of Office, but it has grown to mean the act of being Out of the Office too – so you’ll get people putting sticky notes on their door saying ‘OOF Thurs & Fri’ or even people verbally saying things like, "Oh, Kevin’s OOF on vacation for the rest of the week’. I suppose that sounds better than "Oh, Kevin’s OOO on vacation …"
OOF was a command used in the days of Microsoft’s Xenix mail system, which set a user as ‘Out of Facility’ – ie Out of the Office. The usage of the term ‘OOF’ just stuck, as did the term ‘Little r’ (e.g. on an email sent to a distribution list, "Who wants to go to the cinema tonight? Little ‘r’ if you’re interested", meaning reply just to me) – as preserved in Outlook with CTRL+R for Reply, and CTRL+SHIFT+R (aka Big R) for Reply All.
Big Thanks to Ewan for clearing that up, I have always wondered what the deal was with OOF!