Posted at 1:30 AM on Monday 10 May 2010
I found this and thought I would post it here:

Microsoft Office Help, Tips and Tricks
By Jhuna Bell Mogol

Computers would be meaningless without Microsoft Office. May it be in the office or in the house, people would always rely on MS office for their reports, projects, and presentations. You might be thinking that you already know the ins and outs of this application but believe it or not there are still other features that most people failed to discover. These are Microsoft help and tips that will make Microsoft Office more powerful, more productive, and even easier to use, and they'll let you customize the suite to work the way you want.

* You can zoom in and out Word documents quickly by using the scroll button on your mouse to zoom in and out of documents quickly. Just hold down the Ctrl key and roll the scroll wheel forward to get a closer view of the document, or roll it back to shrink it.

* Holding down the Shift key while selecting the File menu in Word (or in Outlook when composing a message), the menu options change. You get handy options to Save All and Close All open files. In Excel, you get a Close All-but not a Save All-option.

* If you are creating a bulleted or numbered list in Word or PowerPoint, you might want an item to appear on the list without a bullet. You can start a new line without a bullet by pressing Shift-Enter. The next time you press the Enter key, the new line will continue the bulleted or numbered list. Another useful trick: In Excel, you can press Alt-Enter to start a new line within a cell.

* Format Painter is one of the often-overlooked feature found in Microsoft Office. Its icon is found on the upper part of the window with a little paintbrush on it. Once it is selected, it can make you a copy of the text your cursor has selected.

* When you copy text from the Web or another document into a Word file, Word will reproduce the typeface, color, and font size displayed in the original page. If you want the pasted text to match the formatting in the destination document, use Edit | Paste Special, and choose Unformatted Text.

* Don't waste time dragging text around within your document using the mouse if you need to swap the second and third paragraphs in your document. Just click on the paragraph you'd like to move, hold down Shift-Alt, and move the paragraph up or down using the arrow keys. Each press of the arrow key causes the selected paragraph to jump over one adjacent paragraph.

* Things about Shortcut keys- There is a huge collection of these keys used in Microsoft. It might be difficult to memorize it all yet it could give you great help as you do your stuffs in Microsoft Office.

Oftentimes people might think that daily usage of their computer could mean they already know everything, but the actual truth is that there are still more to learn and to find out what. A lot of features area available in our MS Office that were just waiting to be discovered and be utilized.

You can get more help and guidance on ms office and OS by getting a Microsoft Support service as well.

Jhuna Bell Mogol was born in Manila, Philippines on October 3, 1988. She graduated from the Polytechnic University of the Philippines in 2009 with a Bachelor degree in Broadcast Communication. For several years, Bell worked as an Online English Teacher for Koreans in Ortigas, Pasig before getting another position as a secretary in a consultancy office in the same city. She started blogging after her graduation and is now working as a part-time web content writer and SEO specialist for a well-known surgeon in the Philippines and other IT related websites.
Posted at 8:32 PM on Thursday 13 May 2010
Great tips but I'm afraid they might be lost inside this group if someone is doing a search on a particular subject.

Worth separating them into different categories and posting in the blog section?
Posted at 6:10 PM on Monday 17 May 2010
It would be, but I copied that from a website and don't want to get into copyright issues.
Posted at 4:00 PM on Thursday 27 May 2010
Whoops!