Office is produced in several versions targeted towards different end-users and computing environments. It contains a word processor ( Word), a spreadsheet program ( Excel) and a presentation program ( PowerPoint), an email client ( Outlook), a database management system ( Access), and a desktop publishing app ( Publisher). Microsoft also positions Office as a development platform for line-of-business software under the Office Business Applications brand. Over the years, Office applications have grown substantially closer with shared features such as a common spell checker, Object Linking and Embedding data integration and Visual Basic for Applications scripting language. Initially a marketing term for an office suite (bundled set of productivity applications), the first version of Office contained Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel, and Microsoft PowerPoint. It was first announced by Bill Gates on August 1, 1988, at COMDEX in Las Vegas. Microsoft Office, or simply Office, is a discontinued family of client software, server software, and services developed by Microsoft. Proprietary commercial software ( retail, volume licensing, SaaS) Proofing only (11): Hausa, Igbo, isiXhosa, isiZulu, Kinyarwanda, Pashto, Romansh, Sesotho sa Leboa, Setswana, Wolof, YorubaĮnglish, Arabic, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Norwegian (Bokmål), Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Russian, Spanish, Swedish.Partial (48): Afrikaans, Albanian, Amharic, Armenian, Assamese, Azerbaijani (Latin), Bangla (Bangladesh), Bangla (Bengali India), Belarusian, Bosnian (Latin), Dari, Filipino, Georgian, Gujarati, Icelandic, Irish, Kannada, Khmer, Kiswahili, Konkani, Kyrgyz, Luxembourgish, Macedonian, Malayalam, Maltese, Maori, Marathi, Mongolian (Cyrillic), Nepali, Norwegian Nynorsk, Odia, Persian (Farsi), Punjabi (Gurmukhi), Quechua, Scottish Gaelic, Serbian (Cyrillic, Bosnia & Herzegovina), Serbian (Cyrillic, Serbia), Sindhi (Arabic), Sinhala, Tamil, Tatar (Cyrillic), Telugu, Turkmen (Latin), Urdu, Uyghur, Uzbek (Latin), Valencian, Welsh,.Full (43): English, Arabic, Basque, Bulgarian, Catalan, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Estonian, Finnish, French, Galician, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Kazakh, Korean, Latvian, Lithuanian, Malay (Latin), Norwegian Bokmål, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Serbian (Latin, Serbia), Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Somali, Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, Vietnamese.
0 Comments
Now you can head back to the surface, and go right to the fishing area. Tap on this oyster shell and then move over it to collect its pearl. They will reveal a trident that you can pick up. Tap on all of the fish until they are all green. Now use the hot dog on a rope on the sleeping sailor to get him out of the picture. You will automatically tie it to the hot dog. Open this lunchbox to get a hot dog, and pull the nearby level to make the platform come down. This will make the pirate fall asleep, and you can steal his golden idol and jump in the treasure chest. Open the treasure chest in the underground area - using the key from the top floor - to get a telescope.įinally, repeat steps 2, 3, 4, and 5, but now choose the blue tap with the moon on it. When the pirate drinks this, he'll throw his pocket watch at the bartender, which you can sneak up and steal. Repeat steps 2, 3, 4, and 5, but his time fill the jug from the white milk tap. The bartender will fill up the pirate's drink, causing him to belch flames and set the flag alight, revealing a treasure for you to pinch. Pull the string and then hide underground. Then, when he goes right, hop out, put the jug on the left table, and go back under the hatch again.Ĭlimb the ladder to the pirate's room. When the bartender is on the left come down the stairs and go under the hatch. You"ll be upstairs, where you can grab the key on your right, and then fill up the jug with the orange liquid. When the bartender looks left, jump out of the hatch and head through this door. When the bartender is looking right, grab this jug. When he "s finished, tap on the cup with the ball to win a prize - your first bonus item. Tap on the dude with the three cups and keep your eye on the yellow ball. When the bar tender walks to the right, leap out of the hatch and jump in this barrel. Just follow our instructions, and you"ll walk away with your pockets full of junk. These guides will tell you how to get 3 stars on any stage in chapter 3, The Cursed Treasure. The more things you find, the more stars you earn. You can also nab other items, and find your stoat pal, along the way. You play as a pint-size burglar, who must use cunning and guile to pinch a specific object. Tiny Thief- the new Rovio Stars game - presents a series of cartoon vignettes, which mix sneaky stealth gameplay, with tricky point-and-click puzzles. I mean, that manicure– you totally deserve it. Watch now: Free with Netflix subscription, rent from $4, amazon.If we’re being honest, deployment can sometimes be a time to indulge in ways you usually wouldn’t. Even if comic book characters or superheroes are not in your usual movie night picks, this movie is worth a watch. (It is a superhero movie after all, albeit a very modern one.) It is one of the most remarkable animated films I have ever seen, and showcases New York’s skyline, subways, personality, and quirks in some epically illustrated scenes. Led by Miles Morales, an African American and Puerto Rican teen living in Brooklyn who takes up the Spider-Man mantle after, you guessed it, he’s bitten by a radioactive spider, the movie brings together different Spider-Men (and women… and pigs) from different dimensions to fight evil. Sure, you could put any Spider-Man movie ( Tobey Maguire in the Sam Raimi trilogy, Andrew Garfield in the Marc Webb films, or Tom Holland in the Marvel Universe movies) on this list, but the breathtakingly animated Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse takes the cake for me in showcasing New York City. And the kids learn that lesson the hardest of all. The power it instills can be swiftly replaced with insignificance. Its vastness provides an anonymity and boundless sense of adventure, thrill, and excitement, but proves the city can also be dangerous, scary, and lonely. Some have gone on to make it big, like Chloe Sevigny and Rosario Dawson, but what makes Kids so compelling is New York itself-or rather, the relationship between it and the characters. The film's realness is in part due to smart casting-all the titular teens were selected from the streets of New York by casting directors who had been observing city kids with the hopes of finding real-life versions of the characters they were creating. I was 11 when I first saw it-too young by most standards-many oceans away from New York City, and there were scenes that stayed with me so vividly that they became reference points long after that first viewing. There is a rawness to this low budget, documentary-style fictional film that made it more than just a twisted coming-of-age story, but rather turned it into something that resonated deeply and menacingly with viewers from all over. It's feel-good inspiration for anyone who's ever felt stuck in life and yearned to get past it. I love watching her infiltrate the boys' club downtown (steps from my company's offices today), sleuthing her way into a position she greatly deserves, and falling in love with an investment broker with a heart of gold (played by Harrison Ford) as she does it. When she learns her new, female boss (Sigourney Weaver) stole a big idea McGill shared with her, she seizes an opportunity to take it back-by posing in her boss's job. A whip-smart secretary, she's aching for more-attending diction classes, and commuting on the Staten Island ferry while dealing with sleazy Wall Streeters along the way. The main character, Tess McGill (played by Melanie Griffith), is a big dreamer with a rock-solid work ethic and more than a little chutzpah. I have a theory that all NYC transplants have a movie that made us want to move here from wherever we grew up, and for me, it is Mike Nichols' '80s-era masterpiece (set against Carly Simon's beatific theme song). Moonstruck is a story about big love and second chances-and about how some things, whether curses or miracles, are in the eye of the beholder. The passionate, moody opposite of his brother, Ronny draws Loretta in and she falls very quickly into a romance that goes against all she thinks she stands for. While Johnny is on a trip to Sicily to visit his dying mother, Loretta seeks out Johnny's estranged brother, Ronny (played by Nicolas Cage), to invite him to the wedding. When the sweet but obsequious Johnny Cammareri (played by Danny Aiello) proposes properly, she decides this is her chance to get things right (small problem: she doesn't love him). Loretta Castorini (Cher) is a bookkeeper in her late 30s who lost her husband several years prior she's convinced the marriage was cursed because they got married at City Hall. Whenever I watch this movie, I thrill that it was shot near my picturesque Italian-American neighborhood in Brooklyn.
|