Home Office’s applications work under the Microsoft Windows XP/Vista and later environments, and use standard Windows operations. They are integrated, which means that they work together: you can take information from a spreadsheet, display it as part of a report in Write.
Corel Home Office (or simply Home Office for short) consists of three powerful applications:
- WRITE lets you create, format and print documents (see Write).
- CALCULATE lets you create numeric models, make "what if" projections, produce cash flows, and draw charts (see Calculate).
- SHOW lets you create slide shows and rolling demos (see Show)
You can start Home Office applications, switch between them (and other Windows applications) and exit them in the same way as with any standard Windows application. Select the Start button on the Windows taskbar, select All Programs, select Corel Home Office from the list of programs, and then select a Home Office application.
As Home Office is an integrated suite of applications, you can change between applications very easily, using several methods:
- Click on the relevant application along the taskbar at the bottom of the screen to change to an already open window.
- Use ALT+TAB to sequence through all the open windows.
- If the application’s window is visible on the screen, simply click on it to make it the active application.
Write is the Home Office word-processing application. With word-processing, you can type a document, then revise it until it reads and looks just the way you want. Using Write, you can create and edit documents, correspondence, business reports, and other printed materials, including:
- Inter-office memos
- Sales promotional material
- Annual reports
- Advertising copy
- Business letters
- Book manuscripts
Calculate is a tool that is used to organize, track and calculate financial and numerical information. You can use a spreadsheet to analyze figures, calculate totals or averages, or project business trends. In addition, you can use spreadsheets to experiment in "what if" scenarios, seeing what happens when you change the numbers.
You can use spreadsheets to solve complex problems (like calculating mortgage repayments), as well as simpler problems (like calculating miles to the gallon). Here are some more examples of how you can use a spreadsheet:
- Create a yearly budget
- Analyze quarterly sales figures
- Set sales quotas
- Analyze stock investments
- Project loan repayment amounts
- Compute interest payments at variable rates
- Project income and profit figures
Show allows you to create slide shows, or rolling demonstrations, where a series of screens are displayed in sequence. You can have the slide show move from one slide to the next automatically, or you can do this manually using the keyboard or mouse if you are talking over the slide-show.
The basic element of a presentation is the slide. A slide can contain a background, text (often bullet points in real-life presentations), shapes, charts and pictures. Creating several such slides gives you a presentation.
To create and edit presentations effectively, you'll need to learn how to create slides - adding text and graphics - copy slides, move them around and create a common background (items that appear on every slide).
Finally, you'll need to save a presentation, run the show and perhaps send it to another person for viewing. Home Office uses the same file format as Microsoft PowerPoint. So anyone that can view a PowerPoint presentation (for which you need a freely available "viewer") will be able to view a Home Office presentation.
0 comments:
Post a Comment