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Next year (March 2011) Senior Account Manager at Solsis, Steve Chambers will taking part in the Great Wall of China hike over 9 days to raise funds for the Institute of Cancer Research UK.

Below is a link to his blog detailing the challenge, which also has a link to his Face Book fan page, and – more importantly – his online sponsor site!

http://greatwallforicr.co.uk/

The website will be updated regularly with details of Steves preparations, training weekends, planned fundraising days, auctions and raffles and of course updates on his sponsorship.

You can also become a fan on facebook by visiting http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Great-Wall-Hike-Supporting-the-Institute-of-Cancer-Research-UK/352606454316 and promote it to you friends and families to give as much support and exposure as possible!

Feel free to take a look, and if you wish to make a contribution it will be much appreciated!!

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Microsoft have today released their Browser Choice Update forcing users to choose the browser they want installed on their computer. So how does this work and how does it affect you?

Key points

  1. A choice of 12 browsers (7 of which this techie has never heard of)
  2. The browser choice software will be delivered as part of the Windows Update system Microsoft usually uses to distribute security patches.
  3. The choice screen will keep appearing until a user has made a choice. Anyone wanting to stick with IE will be prompted to upgrade to the latest version.
  4. Microsoft said that Windows 7 users who have fixed or “pinned” IE to their taskbar will have it unpinned by the update. Right clicking the icon for any browser will let users pin that program to the taskbar.
  5. It will not pop up in front of those who already run a different default browser, such as Firefox, Safari or Chrome.
  6. Users guaranteed to see it are those that have Internet Explorer (IE) set as their default browser and have taken the option to let Windows automatically download and install updates.

How to handle the Update

Picture of the Browser Choice desktop iconAfter the update is downloaded and you have restarted your computer, you’ll automatically be shown the Browser Choice screen, and you can then select and install the browsers you want to use. (If the Browser Choice screen doesn’t automatically appear when your computer restarts, you can double-click the Browser Choice shortcut on the desktop to select and install web browsers.)

The Browser Choice update doesn’t add or remove any programs from your computer. If you’re using Windows 7 and Internet Explorer is your default browser, the update will unpin the Internet Explorer icon from your taskbar. Internet Explorer will still be available from your Start menu, and you can choose to pin it back on your taskbar. For information on how to pin programs to your taskbar, see Pin a program to the taskbar.

To select and install web browsers using Browser Choice

Follow these steps to use Browser Choice to install one or more browsers to your computer:

  1. Double-click the Browser Choice shortcut on the desktop.
  2. In the Welcome screen, click OK.
  3. In the Select your web browser(s) screen, for each browser you want to install, click Install. Click Tell me more for information about any of the browsers.
  4. Follow any on-screen instructions to install the browser you chose.

Picture of the Browser Choice screen

At Solsis we recommend using Internet Explorer 8, it’s fantastic security features and compatibility with programs such as Outlook Web Access, and Microsoft Office Web Apps is the natural partner for your current network applications

This guide has been replicated in parts from the one on Microsoft’s own website which can be found here. However the part relating to browser recommendation is purely the view of the author

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office-090813

It’s kind of good news for Mac owners when Office 2010 for Mac launches later this year Entourage will be consigned to the attic. It will be replace with a brand new and shiny Outlook for OS X that will rely on a new database, sync with Microsoft Exchange, and be compatible with Outlook for Windows.

Microsoft Mac Business Unit general manager Eric Wilfrid said he application will be a part of Office 2010 for Mac, which is expected to debut late 2010. “Outlook will be a Cocoa application,” Wilfrid said, citing the development layer of Mac OS X. “We’re building on the most modern OS X framework to make Outlook beautiful, to make it high performance, and to make it well integrated with the operating system.”

Outlook for Mac will also include information rights management with cross-platform support. The technology will allow users of Outlook on Mac and Windows to share confidential information on either platform. Features such as flagging messages, creating and accessing public folders and managed folders, and category sync will all be cross-platform as well.

Personally I prefer the support for Exchange Web Services built into OS X Snow Leopard allowing me to sync my Exchange mailbox, calendar, and contacts without needing to have any office suite installed.

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