- Mark/Space, Inc.
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- Microsoft
- Circus Ponies
- MacSpeech
- Web Crossing
- Bare Bones Software
- VMware
- Readers Like You!
- CS Odessa
Find Next Without Using the Find Dialog in Word 2008
Rarely do you want to find just one instance of a word or phrase in Word. Instead of trying to keep Word 2008's Find and Replace dialog showing while searching, which can be awkward on a small screen, try the Next Find control. After you've found the term you're looking for once, click the downward-pointing double arrow button at the bottom of the vertical scroll bar to find the next instance of your search term. The upward-pointing double arrow finds the previous instance, which is way easier than switching to Current Document Up in the expanded Find and Replace dialog.
Written by Jeff Carlson
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Related Articles
- Appeals Court Upholds Napster Injunction (12 Feb 01)
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Other articles in the series Ain't Superstitious!
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- Napster (Finally) Releases Mac Client (30 Oct 00)
Published in TidBITS 541. Subscribe today to receive TidBITS in email every Monday.
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Judges Press Napster's Buttons
Judges Press Napster's Buttons -- Late Wednesday, 26-Jul-00, Judge Marylin Hall Patel issued a preliminary injunction barring the popular and controversial online music service Napster from distributing copyrighted music. However, two judges in the Ninth Circuit Count of Appeals on 28-Jul-00 issued a temporary stay that enables the service to keep operating. The stay should remain in effect until at least early September, when both parties will have filed their arguments regarding the preliminary injunction. Napster is being sued by the Recording Industry Association of America and A&M Records, which claim the company promotes piracy and copyright infringement and that the Web site has cost the recording industry over $300 million in lost sales. Napster claims it enables legitimate swapping of recorded music by acting as a clearinghouse of links to machines where MP3-encoded songs can be downloaded. Nonetheless, Judge Patel wasn't impressed, and barred Napster "from causing, assisting, facilitating, copying, or otherwise distributing all copyrighted songs or musical compositions." Napster's service has been the subject of considerable media attention, including lawsuits from high-profile recording artists and testimony before the U.S. Congress. Nonetheless, Napster is widely seen as being targeted by the recording industry because it's one of the most visible (and easily sued) facilitator of online music swapping, while other similar services such as Gnutella and The Free Network Project are more nebulous and difficult or impossible to trace. [GD]
<http://www.napster.com/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbup=06052>
<http://www.riaa.org/>
<http://www.amrecords.com/>
<http://gnutella.wego.com/>
<http://freenet.sourceforge.net/>
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