Tagged as: Apps, e-mail,
Office Professional 2010, files,
Office Home And Student, How-To, Microsoft Windows, start off menu, Windows seven, Windows Crucial, Windows Vista
By Rick Broida
November six, 2009
I asked him what I considered an apparent query: “Why didn’t you just press the Windows important?”
“The what essential?” he responded.
Seriously? This isn’t common knowledge? Apparently not,
Genuine Office Standard 2010, because after a quick survey of some friends and family, I discovered that few people ever bother with the Windows important, and some don’t even know what it’s there for.
(The horror. Time to re-up your PC World subscriptions,
Office 2010 Serial Key, people!)
Needless to say, a tap of the Windows crucial (which on most keyboards is just to the left of the Space Bar) takes you to the Start menu, where–in Vista and 7–you can start typing to dynamically search for apps, files, e-mail,
Office Standard, and the like.
A lesser-known use of the Windows essential is to launch apps in a flash. And don’t forget these three indispensable Windows-key shortcuts.
So stop thinking of that little important as some kind of wayward Microsoft marketing effort and start putting it to good use!