Monday, January 31, 2011

How to use names instead of cell addresses in Microsoft Excel

Excel
This week's series of tips will be focusing on handy little features for Microsoft Excel and Word. To see the previous tips, check our Tips index.

By default, Excel uses cell references in formulas, which results in formulas that look like D5/20 (Meaning, divide the contents of cell D5 by 20). This is fine as long as your formulas are very simple. If you start pulling in data from multiple cells and using many complex formulas in a single spreadsheet, however, it becomes increasingly difficult to remember what each cell address means.

That's where named ranges come in handy. As the name implies, these are names you can give ranges of cells -- but a range can also be a single cell! So rather than having a formula read D5/20, you could have it read CostOfLiving/20. "CostOfLiving" is actually a named range consisting of one single cell.

This all sounds quite complex, but once you name your first cell you'll see how simple it is. To do this, simply:
  • Select the cell you wish to name.
  • Click the Name Box. This is the text box to the left of the formula bar - it should contain your cell's current address (say, H12).
  • Type in whatever name you wish to use for this cell (say, "MonthlyExpenses"). It must not contain spaces.
  • That's it! You can now use this name in all of your formulas instead of the cell's address.

How to use names instead of cell addresses in Microsoft Excel originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 12 Jan 2011 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/01/12/how-to-use-names-instead-of-cell-addresses-in-microsoft-excel/

SES SHAW COMMUNICATIONS SIEMENS

Martha Stewart Living Magazine for iPad

Martha Stewart Living magazine app is now available for iPad.� The app is free, and you can download a free special edition of the Martha Stewart Living magazine.� Monthly issues are available for in-app purchase for $3.99 an issue.� Right now, there is no subscription option.� I downloaded the free issue last night, and the [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2011/01/29/martha-stewart-living-magazine-for-ipad/

QIMONDA QUALCOMM QUANTA COMPUTER

DJ Mix Table Resembles Giant, Broken iMac

This is the Scomber Mix Table from Hoerboard, and you might be forgiven for thinking that it’s a giant iMac with its neck broken and its head forced back to stare at the stars. A second look will quickly reveal its true purpose: it’s a portable DJ desk.
The foot is fashioned from laser-cut, powder-coated steel [...]

Source: http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/01/dj-mix-table-resembles-giant-broken-imac/

NUANCE COMMUNICATIONS NOVELLUS SYSTEMS NOVELL

Sound Like a Pro: Learn Proper Screw Names at a Glance [Charts]

Amateur homebuilders take note! This handy chart will have you asking for bolts, bits and screws with confidence. Of course, what you do with them after that is where things might get a bit hairy. [Bolt Depot via Boing Boing] More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/tVI4Jif9Q6E/sound-like-a-pro-learn-proper-bolt-names-at-a-glance

VOLT INFORMATION SCIENCES VISHAY INTERTECHNOLOGY VIRGIN MEDIA

Linux and the Great App Store Agenda

Most would agree there's strength in diversity, but sometimes strength also lies in unity. Not the new Ubuntu interface, mind you -- though that may well be strengthening too -- but rather a consistency in the way things are done. That, indeed, is apparently the premise behind a new effort that emerged in recent weeks.

Source: http://www.technewsworld.com/rsstory/71752.html

TEXAS INSTRUMENTS TERADATA TELETECH HOLDINGS

PSA: Change your old Amazon.com password for better security

Amazon's allegedly got an security flaw where hackers can find your password much easier than they would otherwise, and there's already a fix in place. But get this -- you'll probably need to change your password for the fix to take effect, if you haven't already done so in the last couple of years. According to Reddit users, the Amazon.com login system will actually accept any phrase so long as it begins with your password, such as "password123" when the magic word is simply "password" by itself. That apparently makes it that much easier for a computer to guess your password via brute force methods, no matter how counter-intuitive that seems, so if you simply change it immediately -- and to something other than "password," please -- you'll have much sounder dreams.

PSA: Change your old Amazon.com password for better security originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 30 Jan 2011 15:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/01/30/psa-change-your-old-amazon-com-password-for-better-security/

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iPad Soon To Go On Sale In 9 More Countries

Most people around the globe have heard of the iPad by now, even in areas where it’s not yet being sold. The iPad no longer needs an introduction but it will become available in 9 more countries this Friday. Apple’s trend setting gadget, tablet computer, or whatever you’d like to refer to it as, is [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ipadbuzzblog/~3/Mv6_uydNX1c/

ADOBE SYSTEMS ADVANCED SEMICONDUCTOR ENGINEERING ALLIANCE DATA SYSTEMS

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Sony Reader app for Android now available

Sony had promised an Android companion app for its eBook store in January 2011, and it's delivered. You can now find Sony Reader in the Android Market, ready to pocket-size your digital tomes previously purchased from the Reader Store.

Like other eBook apps, Sony Reader allows you to adjust the font size and brightness, and supports bookmarking and highlighting. Tap the bottom of the reading window and a slider appears which you can move to skip ahead or back. You can also jump between bookmarks and highlighted passages, and Reader offers a decent built-in search function as well. As an added bonus for owners of a Sony Reader Daily Edition, you can keep your Android device and e-ink reading on the same page, as it were.



An iOS version is also in the works, though Sony's mobile app page says only that it's "coming soon." Sony Reader for Android is a free download and is available now from the Android Market.

Download Sony Reader for Android [AppBrain]

Continue reading Sony Reader app for Android now available

Sony Reader app for Android now available originally appeared on Download Squad on Fri, 21 Jan 2011 16:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/01/21/sony-reader-app-android/

EMULEX EMS TECHNOLOGIES EMC

Facebook Puts HTTPS Security Guard on Full-Time Duty

Facebook announced new measures Wednesday aimed at improving users' security when visiting the site. The news came with an intriguing twist: Mere hours prior to the announcement, it was revealed that the Facebook fan page of the company's CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, was compromised by a hacker.

Source: http://www.technewsworld.com/rsstory/71737.html

ZIONS BAN YAHOO YAHOO

Google joins the privacy fray, offers up extension that blacklists tracking cookies

Hot on the heels of Mozilla's proposed Do Not Track solution, Google has launched Keep My Opt-Outs, an extension that blocks tracking cookies from targeted advertising providers.

The extension, which is simply a free download from the Chrome Web Store, takes an utterly brute-force approach to the problem. It has a blacklist of known targeted advertisers, and it simply blocks any cookies originating from their domains. The blacklist will be regularly updated as advertising companies adopt the industry's self-regulated privacy standards.

Google notes that the extension is only targeted at U.S.-based ad companies, but a blacklist with European and international advertisers is in the works. The extension will also soon be updated to provide granular control over which cookies are kiboshed, so you'll be able to pick and choose which sites get to show you targeted advertising.

Google joins the privacy fray, offers up extension that blacklists tracking cookies originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 24 Jan 2011 19:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/01/24/google-joins-the-privacy-fray-offers-up-extension-that-blacklists-tracking-cookies/

ADOBE SYSTEMS ADVANCED SEMICONDUCTOR ENGINEERING ALLIANCE DATA SYSTEMS

CrunchGear Week in Review: Hop To It Edition

A Brief Explanation Of Why Minecraft Matters Watch This Amazing GE Video Kind Of Explain Regenerative Train Braking For His Blog: Man Has Been Taking Pictures Of Same Vending Machine For 5 Years Hands On With the Verizon iPhone Edible Concept: Tetris Sugar Cubes

Source: http://www.crunchgear.com/2011/01/17/week-in-review-hop-to-it/

FORMFACTOR FISERV FIRST SOLAR

Hands-On With the iFusion iPhone-to-Landline Converter

Apple sought to reinvent the phone with the iPhone, and now a company is trying to reinvent the landline with an iPhone accessory.
Seriously. That’s the gist of the iFusion accessory, which consists of an iPhone power-charging dock and a Bluetooth receiver that pairs the device with a traditional telephone handset as well as a speakerphone. [...]

Source: http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/01/ifusion-landline/

HCL TECHNOLOGIES HEWLETTPACKARD HIGH TECH COMPUTER

Vibram Five Finger Boots for Cold Weather [Design]

Those ridiculous-miraculous-awesome-awful Vibrams shoes are growing up over the bodies of their fanboys like a symbiotic organism. Their cold-weather boots—FiveFingers Cervinia—now reach half up your leg. I can't wait for them to create a full-body Dune stillsuit. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/FDwkFA-dyU4/vibram-five-finger-boots-for-cold-weather

DIODES INORATED DIEBOLD DELL

Do Not Track: Analysis of Google, Microsoft and Mozilla's solutions

All three major browser providers have now publicized their solution to the FTC's Do Not Track problem. Google has waded in with a thoroughly brute-force extension that was probably programmed in a few hours, and Mozilla has a much softer, "meta" HTTP approach up its sleeve. Microsoft seems to be somewhere in the middle, with a built-in solution that may prove to be the best of both worlds.

That they've all produced different solutions to the problem seems counter-productive, though. Rather than Google and Microsoft working together to create a unified targeted ads blacklist, or a concerted push behind Mozilla's HTTP header approach, we'll have to deal with all three. Not only will this annoy website owners and ad companies -- all three of the methods require their intervention -- but ultimately, you and I will have to deal with fragmented and incomplete blocking, depending on which browser we're using at the time.

Let's take a closer look at how Firefox, Chrome and Internet Explorer will block tracking cookies, and which solution is ultimately the best.

Continue reading Do Not Track: Analysis of Google, Microsoft and Mozilla's solutions

Do Not Track: Analysis of Google, Microsoft and Mozilla's solutions originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 26 Jan 2011 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/01/26/do-not-track-analysis-of-google-microsoft-and-mozillas-solutions/

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Saturday, January 29, 2011

The Watch That Comes From a Future In Which You Still Have No Money to Pay For It [Watches]

This spiffy watch is called La Cl� du Time—the key of time. They should have called it Le Watch That Le Batman Would Use to Kill Le Superman. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/9duE8pk0mSk/the-watch-that-comes-from-a-future-in-which-you-still-have-no-money-to-pay-for-it

ELECTRONICS FOR IMAGING ELECTRONIC DATA SYSTEMS ELECTRONIC ARTS

Songbird app for Android goes beta, we go hands-on

Using Songbird on your desktop or laptop to listen to your cavernous collection of digital music? Good news -- the Songbird team has been working in "super seekrit" (their words, not ours) on bringing you a pocket-sized version for your Android device. Even better, they've announced the availability of the first public beta of Songbird for Android -- and we took it for a spin.

Here's the quick version: Songbird looks nice, and it's got a good set of basic features. It's got a good built-in search and allows you to browse your library by artist, album, song, genre, or playlist. As you peruse your collection, the now playing pane hides itself behind Songbird's playback controls. Tap and drag the tab to slide it into view, and you can swipe through a Flickr-powered photostream or like the track on Facebook.

Want to control your Songbird queue from your homescreen? Like all good Android music players, there's a widget which allows you to do just that.

Continue reading Songbird app for Android goes beta, we go hands-on

Songbird app for Android goes beta, we go hands-on originally appeared on Download Squad on Sat, 22 Jan 2011 16:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/01/22/songbird-app-for-android-goes-beta-we-go-hands-on/

AUTOMATIC DATA PROCESSING AVNET BHARTI AIRTEL

Swype vs. SlideIT: Battle of the Android keyboard swipers

SlideIT vs. Swype
When you've got an itty-bitty touch-screen and need to pound out a quick email, the last thing you're going to want to do is type. I mean, tapping out a text message is fine every now and then, but when you're forced to type more than a couple of lines when you're on the go, sliding is definitely the way to go.

Sliding keyboards utilize the fact that each word, as it is typed, tends to create a unique pattern across the keyboard. So rather than tap-tap-tap, you just touch the screen and drag across the keys you wish to type on. The keyboard then uses the resulting squiggle to figure out what it is you were trying to type.

So far, so good. In theory it sounds great, but in real life things aren't always so silky-smooth. For example, what happens when you need to type a word the keyboard doesn't know, such as a name? Or when there's more than one possible interpretation for the squiggle you just drew?

That's where the differences between different sliding keyboards come into play. In this review I'll be focusing on the two best-known products: Swype and SlideIT. Continue reading after the fold to find out which one is better!

Continue reading Swype vs. SlideIT: Battle of the Android keyboard swipers

Swype vs. SlideIT: Battle of the Android keyboard swipers originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 24 Jan 2011 12:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://downloadsquad.switched.com/2011/01/24/swype-vs-slideit-comparison-battle-of-the-android-keyboard-swipers/

UNISYS TRIQUINT SEMICONDUCTOR TRIMBLE NAVIGATION LIMITED