- Web Crossing
- Fetch Softworks
- Readers Like You!
- CS Odessa
- VMware
- MacSpeech
- Bare Bones Software
- Microsoft
- Circus Ponies
- Mark/Space, Inc.
Copy Excel Selection as a Picture
Want to show someone a chunk of an Excel spreadsheet via email or iChat? You could take a screenshot, but if you want to show just a portion of the Excel window and you don't use a utility like Snapz Pro, you can do this right from within Excel 2008. Make a selection, hold down the Shift key, and choose Copy Picture from the Edit menu. You can select whether the selection will be rendered as though it was shown on screen or as though it was printed. Then just switch to your desired destination and paste.
Written by Adam C. Engst
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Jobs Delivers Macworld Keynote
During his keynote at this week's Macworld Expo NY, Steve Jobs emphasized the health of Apple and the Macintosh, addressing what he termed the "Apple Hierarchy of Skepticsm" in mainstream media by again outlining Apple's four-tiered hardware strategy, consisting of desktop and portable Macintosh models for the consumer and professional markets. (See "Apple Hardware Strategy: Alluring PowerBooks and iMac" in TidBITS-429.) Jobs also announced that the iMac will be available 15-Aug-98, and that iMacs will ship with 56 Kbps modems, rather than the 33.6 Kbps modems originally planned. Microsoft's Ben Waldman also revealed Microsoft will offer a $100 rebate to iMac purchasers who also buy Office 98.
In addition, Jobs demonstrated a DVD drive for PowerBook G3s, using a sleek onscreen interface and a PC Card that handled MPEG decompression. Apple's Phil Schiller demonstrated features of the forthcoming Mac OS 8.5 (due this September), including the ability to save Internet queries and a new searching functionality based on Apple IAT technology (formerly known as V-Twin). The first attempt to demonstrate Mac OS 8.5's network copy performance on 100Base-T Ethernet failed, but a second try showed Power Macs narrowly beating 400 MHz Pentium II systems. Jobs also noted Rhapsody 1.0, which Apple plans to release in the third quarter, will be renamed Mac OS X Server, possibly to alleviate confusion between Rhapsody and Mac OS X and help convince developers Rhapsody isn't a dead-end release. (See "Mac OS X: Rhapsody a Mac Developer Could Love" in TidBITS-430.) Throughout the keynote, Jobs emphasized continued strong sales of G3 systems, numerous recent announcements of new Macintosh applications (including games), and growing support for USB devices on the Macintosh (see "USB and You" in TidBITS-436). So, although the Macworld keynote lacked any stunning announcements, it was well-received by Expo attendees as an affirmation of the vitality of both Apple and the Macintosh.
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