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Using Office Documents in a Web World

Working with Content on an Intranet

Microsoft Office 2000 applications include many new features for creating and working with Web content.

Creating Web pages for an intranet

Every Office application has a Save as Web Page command on the File menu. This command saves the active document in HTML format. Also on the File menu is the Web Page Preview command, which opens the Web browser and shows a preview of what the document will look like when saved in HTML format and displayed in the Web browser.

Individual Office applications have new tools for creating and publishing documents to the Web or an intranet. For example, Microsoft Word 2000 can be used as a powerful HTML authoring tool. The Web Layout command (View menu) gives users a WYSIWYG view of Word documents created for the Web.

Microsoft PowerPoint 2000 makes it easy for users to share presentations over the Web. When a presentation is published in HTML format, the presentation appears in Web browsers with slide navigation controls, a Full Screen Slide Show tool, and optional speaker notes.

In Microsoft Excel 2000 and Microsoft Access 2000, Microsoft Office Web Components allow data to be displayed dynamically in HTML. Users can manipulate, modify, and format this data on the Web.

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Collaborating on documents and sharing information

One of the most powerful uses of an intranet is collaboration. Typical examples of collaboration include the following:

Office also provides tools for tracking and reviewing changes in a document or for rolling them back to earlier versions. These tools can be used with documents published on an intranet to enhance workgroup functionality.

Note   Offline caching is available only to users of Microsoft Internet Explorer 5 or later.

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Publishing in multiple media

Although many documents are created for print, other documents are published directly on CD­ROM, on an intranet, or on the Web. Presentations are distributed in an increasing variety of formats, including 35mm slides, electronic presentations, or HTML documents. Office applications allow users to publish in multiple formats.

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Finding Office documents on an intranet

After documents are published, users might spend a lot of time trying to locate key information or find related documents created by other groups. This challenge effectively limits the size of the audience for the publication — making publication on an intranet a useful alternative because hyperlinks and searching capabilities help users find what they need.

When OSE is installed on a Web server, users can go to the OSE Start Page, a Web page with several tools that assist in using OSE features. One of these tools can search the server for documents based on user-specified criteria, such as words and phrases, and Office document properties, such as title, author, and summary.

Note   The Web Find Fast feature in Office 97 has been replaced in Office 2000 with the OSE Search feature.

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See also

By having OSE installed on a Web server, users are offered many additional collaboration features. For more information about these OSE features, see Using Office Server Extensions.

Another way to share Web data among your users is by using Excel Web queries. You can create a query (IQY file) to run against data published to the Web. For more information, see the Microsoft Office 2000/Visual Basic Programmer’s Guide.



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Friday, March 5, 1999
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