Ever give a presentation that involved a couple of different PowerPoint files? Was it confusing to have the slide numbers of all the different files start over at 1? Looking for a quick fix to avoid duplicates? No, I'm not proposing something so drastic as to merge the two presentations together; it's just a quick adjustment to the slide numbering!
To alter the number of the first slide in a presentation, you need to go to the Page Setup dialogue window.
In older versions of PowerPoint, the Page Setup is found under the File menu.
In PowerPoint 2007, you can find it on the Design ribbon.
In any case, when the Page Setup window opens, take a look in the bottom left corner.

See the Number Slides From field? That's where you'll enter the number you want generic cialis buy online for the first slide in the presentation and then click OK.
There you have it. A quick fix to your duplicate number dilemma!
Here's a super quick copy trick for MS Excel!
Have you ever needed an exact copy of a cell's contents?
And I do mean exact. Even cell references won't be changed in your formulas.
Well, here's the trick: simply select the cell directly below the item to be copied daily cialis and use the Ctrl + ' (Ctrl + apostrophe) key combination.
Yep, that's all there is to it! The cell contents are duplicated and can now be moved to whatever location you choose.
And those cell references in your formula? Well, unlike the results from the usual copy/paste, this method leaves them exactly as they were.
Now, that's what I call a true copy!
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November 10th, 2008
Posted by Mary Jo Foley
Which came first — Google dropping StarOffice from its Google Pack or Sun agreeing to distribute Microsoft’s Live-Search-powered MSN toolbar with the Java runtime?
We’ll probably never know (at least until Sun CEO Jonathan Schwartz blogs about it). But the new deal, announced on November 10, between Sun and Microsoft is ironic, if nothing else, given the twisted history between the two over Java.
(In 1997, Sun sued Microsoft, for alleged misuse of Sun’s Java technology. Microsoft paid $20 million to Sun as a settlement. In 2002, Sun filed a civil antitrust suit against Microsoft over Java again. Microsoft ended up paying Sun $700-million-plus in 2004 to settle “all outstanding antitrust issues.”)
In 2005, Sun struck a deal with Google to bundle the Google toolbar with Java. That deal is replaced by the new agreement with Microsoft — although in the U.S. only and only for Internet Explorer users, as the Seattle Post-Intelligencer notes. The Google toolbar will still be bundled with Java overseas.
Microsoft has been seeking partners to preload its Live Search and other Windows Live properties on new PCs and/or as part of their software offerings.
Microsoft is slated to launch the final “Wave 3″ release of its Live services on November 12, company officials said cialis once a day recently. Microsoft has been beta testing its Wave 3 release of its Live Essentials suite for the past couple of months.
The new Live Essentials suite, unified via a common installer, includes updated versions of Windows Live Messenger instant-messaging; Windows Live Mail (with a new and improved Live Calendar); Windows Live Writer blog-posting tool; Windows Live Movie Maker; Windows Live Photo Gallery, the Family Safety parental control tools and the Outlook Connector.