If you use Microsoft Word (Microsoft Office) as your main program to create documents you will never walk alone? Do you use it to create office documents? Do you use it to create reports? What if you want a means of showing those reports in a totally public and shared manner? Have you thought about saving your Word documents as a Webpage which can be uploaded to the web? Okay, you’re on the phone! (Five minutes later). Do you use it to create office documents? Do you use it to create reports? What if you want a means of showing those reports in a totally public and shared manner? Have you thought about saving your Word documents as a Webpage which can be uploaded to the web? Okay, sorry, my mistake, you’re on the phone! (Ten minutes later). Do you use it to create office documents? Do you use it to create reports? What if you want a means of showing those reports in a totally public and shared manner? Have you thought about saving your Word documents as a Webpage which can be uploaded to the web? Okay, you’re off to the shops! (Fifteen minutes later). Do you use it to create office documents? Do you use it to create reports? What if you want a means of showing those reports in a totally public and shared manner? Have you thought about saving your Word documents as a Webpage which can be uploaded to the web? You have to pick up the kids? (One sun go down, sun come up later). Do you use it to create office documents? Do you use it to create reports? What if you want a means of showing those reports in a totally public and shared manner? Have you thought about saving your Word documents as a Webpage which can be uploaded to the web? (Can I repeat that?) … Microsoft Word Webpage Primer Tutorial
Microsoft Word is a word processor designed by Microsoft. It was first released in 1983 under the name Multi-Tool Word for Xenix systems.[1][2][3] Subsequent versions were later written for several other platforms including IBM PCs running DOS (1983), the Apple Macintosh (1984), the AT&T Unix PC (1985), Atari ST (1986), SCO UNIX, OS/2, and Microsoft Windows (1989). It is a component of the Microsoft Office software system; it is also sold as a standalone product and included in Microsoft Works Suite.
In this tutorial you can see some of the steps you might take in saving your Word document as a webpage using Microsoft Word on Windows (you can get Word for Mac OS X as well), and then, in our case (in your case, you might (s)ftp it to your website), make it viewable in my local EasyPHP (WAMP) web server.
Link to Microsoft Word more information … via Wikipedia, where quote above came from.
Link to Microsoft Word from Microsoft Office Suite “spiritual home” … via Microsoft..
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