Formas de pasar el rato cuando no hay trabajo II.
Otra forma de perder el tiempo:
Buscar información de los "ayudantes de Office".
En la wikipedia original hay un artículo muy interesante.
Va, lo copiaré, para llenar un poco el blog éste...
Office Assistant
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
The Office Assistant is a feature included in Microsoft Office starting with Office 97, and has been dubbed Clippy or Clippit after its default animated paperclip representation. Starting in Office 2000 Microsoft Agent (.ACS) replaced the earlier Microsoft Bob-descended Actor (.ACT) format.
Animated representations other than Clippy were available, such as The Dot, F-1, The Genius, Office Logo, Mother Nature, Links and Rocky. In the editions which used Agent, users could add other .ACS files to set locations for them to show up as selectable assistants. But Clippy is the most widely known.
Clippy was enabled by default in some versions of Microsoft Office, and came to be widely disliked by many users. It would pop open whenever the program thought the user could use its advice, and frequently either the advice was not really required or it was not really useful. Famously, typing an address followed by "Dear" would prompt Clippy to pop-up and say "I see you're writing a letter!" One of the key elements of Microsoft's advertising campaign for Office XP was the removal of Clippy and the Office Assistant from the software, although it was still present if the user enabled it.
The Microsoft Office XP Multilingual Pack provides two additional representations, Saeko Sensei, an animated secretary, and a version of the Monkey King for Asian customers.
Clippy has inspired takeoffs such as Vigor, a version of the vi text editor with a paperclip providing unhelpful "help."
Y la web del anti-clip
Buscar información de los "ayudantes de Office".
En la wikipedia original hay un artículo muy interesante.
Va, lo copiaré, para llenar un poco el blog éste...
Office Assistant
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
The Office Assistant is a feature included in Microsoft Office starting with Office 97, and has been dubbed Clippy or Clippit after its default animated paperclip representation. Starting in Office 2000 Microsoft Agent (.ACS) replaced the earlier Microsoft Bob-descended Actor (.ACT) format.
Animated representations other than Clippy were available, such as The Dot, F-1, The Genius, Office Logo, Mother Nature, Links and Rocky. In the editions which used Agent, users could add other .ACS files to set locations for them to show up as selectable assistants. But Clippy is the most widely known.
Clippy was enabled by default in some versions of Microsoft Office, and came to be widely disliked by many users. It would pop open whenever the program thought the user could use its advice, and frequently either the advice was not really required or it was not really useful. Famously, typing an address followed by "Dear" would prompt Clippy to pop-up and say "I see you're writing a letter!" One of the key elements of Microsoft's advertising campaign for Office XP was the removal of Clippy and the Office Assistant from the software, although it was still present if the user enabled it.
The Microsoft Office XP Multilingual Pack provides two additional representations, Saeko Sensei, an animated secretary, and a version of the Monkey King for Asian customers.
Clippy has inspired takeoffs such as Vigor, a version of the vi text editor with a paperclip providing unhelpful "help."
Y la web del anti-clip
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