 Hi there, this is Kelvin Dewick here and just wanted to show you how you might want to consider configuring Microsoft Word with your new tablet PC. So the first thing you want to do is you want to go to all programs and you want to find Microsoft Office and then Microsoft Word Office Word 2007 is right there. What I would do first of all is right-click on my mouse and I would probably pin it to the start menu because that's one of the programs you're going to be using the most often and you don't want to go hunting for it. By doing that, now when we hit start you'll see Microsoft Office Word is sitting right there all by itself and we can just hit go. This is the first time I'm using Word on this computer so we'll see if it wants me to do a bunch of login type things or whether it's ready to go. Looks like it's ready to go. A couple of things I always do right away by default with my tablet. If I'm planning on having this displaying onto a projector so that students can see it, I would right away go down here where it says zoom level. I would click on 100% and I would choose page width and now I'm using the whole screen. You may notice that this is your first time using Word 2007. The menu screen is totally different. It's a learning curve, but it's great. Once you get used to it you'll find even the most obscure functions are no more than two clicks away. However, we're going to make some hot keys at the very very top here. This is the customizable menu and we're going to add some buttons that I think you're going to use all the time. To do that we're going to click on the office button, left click. We're going to scroll down to word options right here and then we're going to click on customize right here. We're going to add certain commands. Now it says choose from popular commands. I just go to all commands. These are some of the ones that I have chosen to add because I use them all the time and I'd like them just to be on the top row. First one is save as. These are alphabetical so I'm just holding the mouse button down and scrolling down and I saw the S's and I want just plain old save as this one right there add because often I want to save it as a PDF file or I want to save it as a different type of file. I don't want to have to go mucking around to try and find that. Another command I always add is open to open a new file. That'll be under the letter O for open and I'm just clicking on the word add and now it's been added to the menu. If I want to open stuff I also want to close stuff. I've found however that having the open and the close key right next to each other that's a recipe for disaster. I get them mixed up. I'm going to put one other command between them. I'm going to put the print command between them. Now I'm going to go find close. Close. Two other ones I use all the time. One is going to be insert symbol and I think that's under the letter I. Insert. Insert lots of inserts. Insert symbol. This is how you can get your thetas and your, you know, while your own symbols and the Greek letters. So I'm going to add that and then the one that I use all the time is the start inking command and I believe that's under S. I think it's called start inking. Start inking. There it is. Add. These are the ones I use the most but as you find you're using certain commands feel free to just customize your start bar, your command bar. Now if I want to do any inking all I would do is I would click on that button right there and now the start inking menu comes up and you can see I can draw in my word document. I can erase my word document. I can highlight stuff. I can use a felt tip pan. I can use a ballpoint pan. I can delete all ink and to get rid of the ink commands I just hit close. So those are the way, that's the way I customize Microsoft Word. You may want to add others. You may consider purchasing math you add in. Well it's the old math editor from Office 2003. Okay. Well that's that video.