- Office Reference Guide
- Table of Contents
- Surrealty: An Organic Case Study
- Working with Microsoft Word
- Branding Yourself with Microsoft Word
- Revising Your Document
- Saving and Using Document Templates
- Formatting with Styles
- Secrets of AutoText and AutoCorrect
- Trying To Remain Normal
- Customing Word with Macros, Menus, and Toolbars
- Document Management: Scanning into Word
- Using the Clip Organizer
- Backing Up Your Office System
- A Testimonial To Tables
- Navigating with Bookmarks
- Using a Document Map
- Creating a User Form
- Introduction to Word 2007
- Blogging with Word 2007
- Using Word 2007 Quick Parts and Building Blocks
- Mail Merge in Word 2007
- Word 2007: Open and Repair
- Styling: Using the New QuickStyles in Word 2007
- Compare and Combine Document Versions in Word 2007
- Accelerating Your Knowledge of Excel
- Getting Started with Excel Worksheets
- Creating and Autofitting Cell Content
- Populating the Worksheet with Data
- Using AutoSum To Create Automatic Calculations
- Using Formulas
- Making Your Worksheet Look Nicer
- Charting the Data
- Completing the Financial Picture
- Getting Fancy With Xcelsius
- Say It With Charts!
- The Effect of Text Entries and Blank Cells on Calculations
- Filtering Your Outlook Contacts
- New Charting and Productivity Tools
- Cataloging Your Backups in Excel
- Using Excel as a Simple Database
- Painless Pivot Tables
- Creating Interactive Spreadsheets Online
- Moving an Excel Macro
- Working with Scenarios and Goals
- Using Excel's Solver
- Emphasizing Sales Data in Excel
- XspandXL for Spreadsheet Analysis
- New Crystal Xcelsius Light (Free)
- Excel Business Analysis Books
- Excel 2007 Sorting, Filtering and Table Enhancements
- Creating an Entrepreneurial Marketing Plan in Excel 2007
- Named Ranges in Excel 2007
- Maintaining a Positive Outlook
- Using Word for Email
- Creating an Email Signature
- Handling Email Efficiently
- Creating an Anti-Spam Filter
- Working with Contacts
- Adding a Contact from Email
- Saving a Contact as a vCard
- Using the Calendar
- Appointments, Events, and Meetings
- Setting Tasks and Making Notes
- Protecting and Exporting Outlook Information
- Creating a Distribution List, and Other Outlook Tips
- Mail-Merge E-mail
- Creating an Outlook Form
- Completing the Outlook Form Solution
- Using Search Folders and Anti-Spam Tips
- Creating an E-Mail Template
- Using Outlook with a Cell Phone
- Stupid Outlook Tricks
- Using Multiple Outlook Calendars
- Using NewsGator for RSS in Outlook
- Review: <em>Conquer Email Overload with Better Habits, Etiquette, and Outlook 2003</em>
- Using Anagram's Artificial Intelligence
- MeetingSense for Enhanced Outlook Productivity
- Introduction to Outlook 2007 and Predictions
- Trying Business Contact Manager
- Outlook 2007 Organization Features
- Taking Your Outlook 2007 Calendar Online
- Going Mobile with My New SmartPhone
- Synching Outlook with Facebook
- Workaround: Create a Private Distribution List in Outlook
- Microsoft Office Outlook Connector
- "Where Are My Socks?" Accessing Your Important Information
- Exploring the Northwind Application
- Access Basics
- Creating Tables
- Using Forms for Data Entry
- Creating a Report
- Querying Your Database
- Creating Relationships
- Using Access for Business Documents
- Customizing an Access Template
- Using Macros and Switchboards in Access
- Creating an Online Data Access Page
- What's New in Access 2007
- Making Your Access 2007 Forms and Reports Look Professional
- Use the Access Label Wizard
- Presenting Professionally with PowerPoint
- Introduction to PowerPoint
- Creating Cool Diagrams
- Using the Diagram Object
- Beginning the Org Chart
- Using the Org Chart Toolbar
- Changing the Org Chart Layout
- Selecting Portions of the Org Chart
- Moving and Formatting the Selection
- Applying Styles to the Org Chart
- Using the Other Conceptual Diagrams
- Adding Our Concepts
- Moving Shapes with the Diagram Toolbar
- Moving or Resizing the Diagram
- Using the Diagram Styles
- Changing Your Concept Diagram
- Turning Off AutoFormat
- Adding a Caption or Title
- Summary
- Q&A
- Customizing Your Presentation
- The Concept of Customization
- Accessing the Master Views
- Understanding the Master Views
- The Power of the Master Views
- Adding Our Logo
- Changing Other Elements
- Slide Master Rules
- Using the Title Master
- Using the New Slide Master Template
- Adding Date and Time to a Footer
- Using Headers and Footers
- The Master View Toolbar
- Using the Handout Master
- Using the Notes Master
- Using Page Setup to Change the Presentation Type
- Summary
- Q&A
- Accessorizing for Presentations
- The Potential Of Photo Album
- Using Broadcast Quality Effects
- The Latest Presentation Gear
- Using PowerPoint, Video and DVD
- Microsoft Producer for PowerPoint
- Expanding PowerPoint with Plug-Ins
- Using Presenter View with a Projector
- Getting Into Your Presentation -- Literally
- The View from PowerPoint LIVE
- Making a PowerPoint Movie (not just for the Mac anymore)
- Making a Self-Running Animated Holiday Card
- Reporting on Databases in PowerPoint
- HD or Not HD, That Is The Question
- Taking On Tufte
- What the Heck Do I Say?
- Broadcasting PowerPoint Video with Serious Magic
- Video Blogging as a Presentation Value-Add
- This Just In: PowerPoint Secedes from MS Office!
- Two New PowerPoint Add-Ins
- Podcasting our PowerPoint
- What We Can Learn from InfoComm 2005
- Putting Yourself in the Show
- What You Can Learn from SIGGRAPH
- Using DVD Video in PowerPoint
- Animating Individual Chart Elements
- The Magic of PowerPoint LIVE 2005
- Making Sure Your Video Plays
- Creating a Timeline Template in PowerPoint
- Creating Transparent Animation and Backgrounds
- Using Advanced Animation Techniques
- Advanced Animation Part 2: Reusing Motion Paths
- Advanced Animation Part 3: Masked Backgrounds and Triggers
- Getting an Ovation with PowerPoint
- Video that Plays For Certain
- Using an Animated PowerPoint Chart on DVD
- Packaging Music Files with PowerPoint
- Say It With Presentations
- Keep Saying It With RSS
- PowerPoint LIVE 2006
- Total Solution: Using Propaganda for a PowerPoint Podcast for iTunes
- Wildform Wild Presenter for Interactive PowerPoint Online
- PowerFrameworks to Stimulate Your Creative PowerPoint Juices
- Distributing Video for iPods and Other Devices
- Converting Bullets to SmartArt Graphics in PowerPoint 2007
- Editing Video in PowerPoint (And a Lot More)
- Enhancing PowerPoint with Stock Photos
- Creating Sticky Documents and Presentations
- Review: Why Most PowerPoint Presentations Suck
- Using PowerPoint 2003 and 2007 Together: Preparing for InfoComm 2007
- Converting Flash to PowerPoint Video
- Animated Artwork for PowerPoint: PointClips and Vox Proxy
- Cutting Edge Graphics at SIGGRAPH 2007
- The Insert Object Animation Trick in PowerPoint
- Using YouTube Video in PowerPoint
- Using PowerPoint 2007 with Video Online
- PowerPoint LIVE 2007: Presentation Paradise in the Big Easy
- Camatasia 5.0: An Upgrade Worth the Effort
- Solving Video Playback in PowerPoint for Vista
- Review: Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007 Complete Makeover Kit
- Graphic Novels in PowerPoint
- The Ultimate Presentation
- Opazity: PowerPoint for Lazy People
- Using SlideShare for Online PowerPoint with Narration
- Mastering Themes in Office 2007 (and Specifically PowerPoint 2007)
- VIDITalk's New Online Presenter Program
- Using and Converting YouTube Video for PowerPoint
- SlideRocket: Documents in the "Cloud"
- PFC Pro: Use YouTube Directly in PowerPoint and Maybe Get Your Web Cam into a Web Conference
- AuthorSTREAM: PowerPoint with Narration Made Easier Online
- Slide:ology: Nancy Duarte’s Design Secrets and Her New PowerPoint Book
- Mastering the New Slide Masters (and Layouts) in PowerPoint 2007
- Using PowerPoint 2007 to Create Slides That Don't Look Like PowerPoint (Video Update)
- A Treasure Trove of PowerPoint Templates
- Posting a Web Site with FrontPage
- Getting a Web Site
- Creating a FrontPage Web
- Where's My Web?
- Adding Navigation
- Applying a Theme
- Publishing Your Site
- The Old MHT Trick
- Taking Over A FrontPage Web
- Expression Studio 2.0: A Worthy Successor to FrontPage
- Publish or Perish
- Creating Publications for Print
- Publisher Web Sites
- Creating an E-Mail Newsletter
- E-mailing Holiday Cards
- Publisher 2007
- Get Visual with Visio
- Creating a Visio Flowchart
- Connecting Shapes
- Examining the Shapesheet
- Creating a Report
- Moving In With Visio
- Expanding Visio with Third-Party Stencils
- Playing Well with Others Using Visio
- Creating Interactive Diagrams with Visio's Layers
- Creating a "Virtual Database"
- Creating a Visio Dynamic Solution Template
- Visio 2007
- Visio 2007 Professional IT Toolbox
- Project Management with Visio 2007 Gantt and Pert Charts
- Review: Using Microsoft Office Visio 2007
- Tools That Integrate Your Office Applications
- Creating Video E-Mail with MovieMaker
- Managing Pictures with Microsoft Office Picture Manager
- New Year's Predictions: 2005
- Office Predictions for 2006
- Favorite Books List
- Using Excel as a Database Conversion Tool for Outlook
- Oh, Brother, I Love Labels (and other Office Tips)
- Planning for Disaster
- Using OneNote with Outlook
- Web Resources for Microsoft Office
- Simple 3D in Microsoft Office
- Creating Dynamic Database Links
- Using an Access Query for Mail Merge
- Displaying Database Links with Xcelsius Enterprise
- An Office 12 Sneak Preview from PDC
- My Big Fat Office Vacation
- What CES 2006 Means to Office Users
- Using "Send To" Between Office Applications: Word and
- Running (and Surviving) a Web-based Conference
- Running an Online Office with HyperOffice and Writely
- Preparing with Index Cards
- Creating Meeting Agendas
- Collecting Data with New Technologies: ARS, SMS and RFID
- Using Application Sharing in a Web Conference
- Running an Online Notes or Windows Media Session
- Trying Out Live Meeting
- Creating a SharePoint Team Website
- Using and Customizing a SharePoint Team Website
- Creating a Trip Planner in Excel and Outlook
- Crystal Graphics’ Excel and Solutions and Chart
- GoToMeeting Instant Webinar Tool
- Checking Out Office Live
- Using Quindi Meeting Capture
- Using Excel to Link to Other Databases
- Trying Out Mind Manager Pro to Brainstorm with Office Programs
- The 13th Thing I Hate About Office
- Introduction to Office 2007
- What's New in Excel and PowerPoint 2007
- Take a Look at InfoPath 2007
- Office's Groovy New Collaboration Program
- Using Office Accounting Express
- Printing to PDF or XPS in Office 2007
- Getting Adjusted to Office 2007 Changes
- Using SnagIt for IT Training
- Providing Help with Go To My PC
- Vista Meeting Space and People Near Me from Microsoft
- Trying Expression Web
- Migration Issues to Word and Outlook 2007
- Vista – Are You Kidding Me?
- Making Office 2007 (and Vista) Work Properly
- Office and the Enterprise
- Survey Says – Use Web Surveys with Excel and Access
- Uninstalling Office 2007 in Windows XP Pro
- Using Excel for Tables in Office 2007
- VIDITalk – Video in SharePoint and Beyond
- Career Advancement for Office Professionals
- Online Database that Rivals Access?
- Web 2.0 2008 in San Francisco
- Going Virtual for MS Office
- Going Virtual Using Mobile Apps
- Managing Your Contacts Across the Office Suite
- Charts in PowerPoint and Excel 2007 (Video Update)
- Outline View: The Document Planning Bridge between Word and PowerPoint
- Using Document Inspector in Office 2007
- SmartDraw: A Powerful Communications Tool to Supplement MS Office
- Visio 2007's New Pivot Diagram
- Using the Macro Recorder in Visio 2007 (Video Update)
- Compatibility Pack: Challenges of Using Office 2007 Documents in Previous Versions
- Microsoft Office Live Small Business Beta
- No One Asked Me But... What I Want (and Don’t Want) in the Next Office and Windows
- Late New Year's Resolution: Keys to Effective IT Communication
- SmartDraw Extras: Healthcare and Legal Templates
- Interesting Upgrades: Camtasia 6 and SnagIt 9
- Addressing the Office 2007 Read-Only Runaround
- Getting Organized with OneNote
- Flagging OneNote Information
- Recording and Organizing with OneNote
- Recording and Organizing Video in OneNote
- OneNote 2007
- Using OneNote 2007 Efficiently with Other Office 2007 Apps
- Using OneNote as a Voice Recorder
- Video Tutorials
- Charts in PowerPoint and Excel 2007
- Using PowerPoint 2007 to Create Slides That Don't Look Like PowerPoint
- Using the Macro Recorder in Visio 2007
- Playing a CD Audio in a Self Running Presentation
- Textboxes, QuickParts and Building Blocks in Word 2007
- Working Between PowerPoint and PDF
- Additional Resources
- Exploring Twine and the New Semantic Web
- A Tale of Two Tech Supports — OfficeLive and Zoho
- Digital Hollywood 2008
- Infocomm 2006
- InfoComm 2007
- Judging a Disc By Its Cover
- Surviving the Office 2007 Beta
- The Latest Word from CES 2007
Unless you've been sleeping under a rock, you know that an abundance of web conferencing programs are available. Before broadband, larger companies used video conferencing solutions that were completely proprietary on wide area networks. Now there are many IP based solutions, including two from Microsoft:
- LiveMeeting, acquired when they purchased Placeware, which takes over from Netmeeting and SharePoint Services (another collaboration tool).
- Microsoft also recently acquired Groove, a collaboration tool that presumably will be phased into the next version of Microsoft Office.
In this space, Webex is still the biggest player. My guess that it is being quickly chased by GoToMeeting, which was recently acquired by Citrix. I recently watched a GoToMeeting demo, which shared the desktop efficiently; and everything worked.
I can't really say as much for some of the other conferences I have attended. A lot of the problems seem to have to do with relying upon various Java applications along with Internet Explorer.
Before I go into my own recent experience in actually running a conference, let me mention some other players in this space:
- Macromedia Breeze: a complete publishing solution that works with its own proprietary video format, FLV.
- Conferral: A competitor with collaboration features.
- Raindance: A conferencing tool widely used, and recently reviewed by PC Magazine.
There are scores of others. In a way, I could include Microsoft OneNote, which I've written about before; a collaborative OneNote session is available as part of the program.
My First Webinar
As those of you who have read the Introductions to my weekly updates know, I recently did a "webinar" on how to use video in PowerPoint.
The host for this program was the Presentations Council of InfoComm International, of which I am a proud member. The council puts on monthly web conferences as an educational event for its members, actual and prospective.
The program that InfoComm uses for its web conferences is Genesys, so that is the tool I needed to use. Like most of these conferencing tools, Genesys opens a virtual "Meeting Center," constructing a virtual online meeting into which the participants can log in from an email invitation.
There are two main options for audio. You can use your computer speakers as part of the meeting. Or, the more user friendly option, you can use a conference call service into which the participants phone in – which is what we did.
But I'm getting a bit ahead of myself. A couple of days prior to the actual event, I did a mock test of the meeting center to see how my presentation would work.
There are a few ways to set up something like this. Probably the easiest of them is to load up a set of PowerPoint slides into the application, and show them. Another way, great for training, is to have several applications open; and then toggle between shared applications.
The third technique, which I opted for, is to share your entire desktop, so that the audience sees whatever is on top.
Theoretically, this is great because it allows you to work "normally." As we'll see, however, there are issues.
I ran a Java test prior to logging in to the test meeting, fine-tuned my browser (IE), and was greeted by the moderator. The next step was getting control from the moderator, which she did in the Genesys system.
The glitch occurred when we tried to have me share my desktop. It took a call to the very helpful Genesys tech support team to discover the problem: blocked popups. For the shared desktop to work, I had to turn off two popup blockers, one in IE and the other in my Yahoo toolbar.
After that, I saw all of my running applications under a Shared tab, and activated share for my desktop. I was off and running... Almost.
Remember my topic is using video effectively. So I had a nice 640x480 video in my first slide. I tried to play it. It played fine on my computer, but the two folks in the meeting center only saw a black square!
This brings up an obvious issue. You are transmitting lots of screen information in real time. The network can't keep up with full frame video of that size. That's why most web cams, even on broadband, are small windows at low frame rates.
I was also counseled to change my screen resolution down to 800x600 for the conference, so that again less information needed to be updated per second.
But the stuff worked. So I was ready to go. I logged in forty minutes early and was introduced by the host. You can view the presentation here.
So when I was introduced I already had the moderator controls, but the attendees where told to put their phones on mute.
I didn't realize it at the time, but this is scary. You're literally cut off from the audience.
In addition, although I passed over the video in the first slide, knowing that it wouldn't play very well for the attendees to see, I quickly realized as I went through my slides that I had another problem: I couldn't see what my audience was seeing.
Working on a local machine, everything ran great. But I was blithely hyperlinking to other presentations and opening other programs for demos on my desktop. I immediately thought about slowing down, which I did, but I was totally cut off.
This was partially my own fault. I should have had attendees unmute their phones to provide feedback.
Another potential feedback channel was the Chat window. Along with a Whiteboard, Chat is part of most conferencing programs. But having opted to share my desktop and go full screen, my chat window was obscured.
In hindsight, what I should have done, was logged in separately as an attendee using my laptop. Then, with my laptop beside me, I would have had a real-time view of what my attendees were seeing. I highly recommend this for any of you who are going to do videoconferencing in the future.
Only now, having watched the archived version on the web, do I see that my hyperlinks actually worked – including one where I showed another PowerPoint slide with five small videos.
Again, I did not play the videos, although the small screen versions probably would have played, albeit with dropped frames and unsynched lips.
At the end of the conference I stopped for questions, and as phones were unmuted, there were very few. True, I had presented a load of technical material which seemed to have overwhelmed my audience. But unlike a live presenter, I had no faces to read or body language to evaluate. I was out there in web space. Finally, some questions were articulated, and the conference concluded.
What I want to stress is that you need to minimize this feeling of isolation. The muted phone thing may be necessary in some situations (with a hostile audience), but combined with the obscured chat window, it makes it hard to pace the presentation and know how it is being received.
Each conferencing tool is different. However, the chat and audio channels (phone conferencing) are common threads. Make sure you have them in place before setting up a conference.
Finally, if you are venturing into the web conferencing space, you owe it to yourself to visit the site of the acknowledged guru -- Robin Good. His site, Master New Media, has probably the most up-to-date information and reviews of all conferencing solutions, along with related information on podcasting and royalty free images.
Of course, in the final analysis, like anything else the only way to learn it is to do it – which is why I wanted to do my first webinar with the Presentations Council.
Next time, I will know how to turn off my popups, set up a laptop monitor to show me what the audience sees, and make sure that my connection with the audience is never severed.
But for the first attempt, it was very enlightening to learn the pluses and minuses of real time web conferencing.