Page 1 of 3 Real Time Collaborative Writing One of the Most

Page 1 of 3 Real Time Collaborative Writing One of the Most

Real Time Collaborative Writing One of the most demanded features included in Office 365 is the ability of the users to collaborate on a common document in real time (at the same time). Both users see the document, both users can keyboard simultaneously, and each user see what the other is keyboarding. Some suggest Office 365 is Microsoft’s answer to Google Docs. We will assume we have two users – Tom and Dick (Harry has the flu). TOM Using the “app launcher”, start Word On-Line At the top right corner, click [Share] Keyboard the address of the person (s) to share with Click [Share] DICK Using the “App Launcher”, start Outlook Open the e-mail invitation and click on the file name Click [Edit Document] and [Edit with Word On-Line] Dick will now see a red marker on his screen where Tom’s cursor lies BOTH Both people will see the other person’s name at the top right of the screen TOM Tom sees a green marker where Dick’s cursor lies Tom presses [Enter] a few times – then [Up Arrow] to get up to the start of the document. Tom now starts to keyboard Page 1 of 3 DICK Dick presses the [Down Arrow] a few times to move down the screen (away from Tom’s cursor) and starts to keyboard BOTH Both can see everything being keyboarded – and – can actually edit each other’s work – since they are both working on the same document at the same time. NOTE: Since TOM created the document – TOM “owns” the document – and it will only appear in TOM’S [One Drive]. DICK can, however, come back to it later using the previous invitation. HARRY Harry just got back from the drug store where he bought some “Advil Cold and Sinus Plus” and is starting to feel more human Page 2 of 3 Collaborative Writing Exercise In this exercise we are going to assume there are two Collaborative Writers: TOM DICK (HARRY is still not up to attending class) TOM is going to initiate the document and invite DICK. TOM will keyboard a few [ENTER] on the screen to give space for Dick to keyboard. TOM: Umpire Mike Winters was suspended by Major League Baseball for the remainder of the regular season on Wednesday because of his confrontation with San Diego's Milton Bradley last weekend. DICK: The Padres claimed Winters baited Bradley, who has a history of losing his temper. Bradley tore a knee ligament when his manager spun him to the ground while trying to keep him from going after the umpire during Sunday's 7-3 loss to Colorado in San Diego. TOM: Winters was suspended because the commissioner's office concluded he had used a profanity aimed at Bradley, a baseball official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the reasoning for the suspension was not announced. DICK: Padres manager Bud Black declined to comment. TOM: "In this case, I think it's best for my position to just stay away from it," he said by phone from San Francisco, where the Padres were to finish a series against the Giants on Wednesday night. DICK: The 48-year-old Winters became a major league umpire in 1990 and worked the World Series in 2002 and last year. TOM: Winters became the first umpire suspended since 2003, when Bruce Froemming and John Hirschbeck each were suspended for 10 days. Froemming made an anti-Semitic slur about an umpiring administrator and baseball said Hirschbeck threatened a senior official in the commissioner's office. DICK: Bob Watson, baseball's vice president in charge of discipline, has not decided whether to penalize Bradley, the commissioner's office said. Page 3 of 3 .

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    3 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us