So, yeah. As one of my friends recently suggested,
Microsoft Office Pro Plus 2007 Serial, I'm "that geek that does that comic." It didn't start out that way. (The comic part--not the geek part.) My day job is to write Help for Office and Office Online. I mostly write about Visio,
Microsoft Office 2007 Pro Activation cl��, but I also write about other Office products when needed. I've been writing Help for the software industry for over 10 years. I started out by writing developer documentation for Microsoft Research in 1997, moved to Visio in 1998, and then moved to Office when Visio was acquired by Microsoft in 2000. I love what I do, and I thought I would get to do it for the rest of my professional life. And then, a few months back, a colleague of mine who writes for Word sent me an e-mail about this guy who uses comic storyboards to design software. The basic idea is that comics can help focus the reader's attention on user attitudes and thoughts so that the resulting software design is more "user centered." Interesting, she thought. Maybe we can use comics in our Help. "Our next content type?" she pondered. Nintendo and IKEA do it--why not Microsoft? I thought it was a brilliant idea,
Office 2007 Enterprise Serial, so I offered to help by developing a Visio template to make the comics easier to create. As a test of the template,
Office 2007 Professional Plus Serial Key, I created a lame comic that for some bizarre reason she thought was kinda' funny, so I made another comic, and another,
Microsoft Office Professional 2007 clavegen, and pretty soon I was creating comics daily. It's a deeply held secret that most people at Microsoft have a wonderful sense of humor. The meetings I attend often erupt into uncontrolled fits of laughter. I guess if you get a lot of really smart people into a room--people who have been working a little too hard--silliness will ensue. It's also a little known fact that Microsofties (as we like to be called) are desperate for stronger connections with customers. I know this may sound trite, but we really do care about you, and we want to know more about you. We're clingy like that. That's when I had this thought. Nothing kicks off a conversation better than a little bit of humor. You know the drill. You're at a party. You want to start a conversation with the person standing next to you. You rack your mind for something funny to say. You say something stupid instead, but it doesn't matter. They still laugh. And even though it was at you instead of with you, the conversation has started. What if I started posting my comics for public consumption? Sure, I'll probably (as in 100% probably) look stupid, but that doesn't matter. Maybe customers will laugh and we'll start a conversation. It was at this point that another colleague of mind who also writes for Word (sensing a pattern here?) suggested that I do a comic about single spacing in Word 2007. She liked the comic well enough that she passed it along to the Word team, who decided to post it to this blog. At the time, it seemed kind of risky. Would customers be offended? Would it make the situation worse? No one knew for sure, and I'm grateful to the Word team for taking a chance. So that's how these comics started and why we've started posting them here. We really do want know want to hear from you, and we hope these comics encourage you to tell us what you think about Word. So tell us. The conversation only works if both people at the party participate. d <div