Need a toolbar!

M

Miss Perspicacia Tick

Q said:
1. Nobody "whines"


Then what would you call it? Sounds like whining to me..
2 I do not agree about the toolbar, and consider your notes cryptic
-not user friendly to the beginner.

Then you don't know how to use the OS - the OSB is obsolete. My instructions
are NOT cryptic - they hav been tested on countless beginners - including my
own mother who had no trouble following them. Suggest you learn, instead of
looking for the easy option all the time.
3. Be more tolerant.

I was. You need to learn how to use the operating system.
 
M

Miss Perspicacia Tick

Q said:
1. Nobody "whines"


Then what would you call it? Sounds like whining to me..
2 I do not agree about the toolbar, and consider your notes cryptic
-not user friendly to the beginner.

Then you don't know how to use the OS - the OSB is obsolete. My instructions
are NOT cryptic - they hav been tested on countless beginners - including my
own mother who had no trouble following them. Suggest you learn, instead of
looking for the easy option all the time.
3. Be more tolerant.

I was. You need to learn how to use the operating system.
 
M

Miss Perspicacia Tick

Q said:
1. Nobody "whines"


Then what would you call it? Sounds like whining to me..
2 I do not agree about the toolbar, and consider your notes cryptic
-not user friendly to the beginner.

Then you don't know how to use the OS - the OSB is obsolete. My instructions
are NOT cryptic - they hav been tested on countless beginners - including my
own mother who had no trouble following them. Suggest you learn, instead of
looking for the easy option all the time.
3. Be more tolerant.

I was. You need to learn how to use the operating system.
 
M

Miss Perspicacia Tick

Q said:
1. Nobody "whines"


Then what would you call it? Sounds like whining to me..
2 I do not agree about the toolbar, and consider your notes cryptic
-not user friendly to the beginner.

Then you don't know how to use the OS - the OSB is obsolete. My instructions
are NOT cryptic - they hav been tested on countless beginners - including my
own mother who had no trouble following them. Suggest you learn, instead of
looking for the easy option all the time.
3. Be more tolerant.

I was. You need to learn how to use the operating system.
 
M

Miss Perspicacia Tick

Q said:
1. Nobody "whines"


Then what would you call it? Sounds like whining to me..
2 I do not agree about the toolbar, and consider your notes cryptic
-not user friendly to the beginner.

Then you don't know how to use the OS - the OSB is obsolete. My instructions
are NOT cryptic - they hav been tested on countless beginners - including my
own mother who had no trouble following them. Suggest you learn, instead of
looking for the easy option all the time.
3. Be more tolerant.

I was. You need to learn how to use the operating system.
 
M

Miss Perspicacia Tick

Q said:
1. Nobody "whines"


Then what would you call it? Sounds like whining to me..
2 I do not agree about the toolbar, and consider your notes cryptic
-not user friendly to the beginner.

Then you don't know how to use the OS - the OSB is obsolete. My instructions
are NOT cryptic - they hav been tested on countless beginners - including my
own mother who had no trouble following them. Suggest you learn, instead of
looking for the easy option all the time.
3. Be more tolerant.

I was. You need to learn how to use the operating system.
 
M

Miss Perspicacia Tick

Q said:
1. Nobody "whines"


Then what would you call it? Sounds like whining to me..
2 I do not agree about the toolbar, and consider your notes cryptic
-not user friendly to the beginner.

Then you don't know how to use the OS - the OSB is obsolete. My instructions
are NOT cryptic - they hav been tested on countless beginners - including my
own mother who had no trouble following them. Suggest you learn, instead of
looking for the easy option all the time.
3. Be more tolerant.

I was. You need to learn how to use the operating system.
 
M

Miss Perspicacia Tick

Q said:
1. Nobody "whines"


Then what would you call it? Sounds like whining to me..
2 I do not agree about the toolbar, and consider your notes cryptic
-not user friendly to the beginner.

Then you don't know how to use the OS - the OSB is obsolete. My instructions
are NOT cryptic - they hav been tested on countless beginners - including my
own mother who had no trouble following them. Suggest you learn, instead of
looking for the easy option all the time.
3. Be more tolerant.

I was. You need to learn how to use the operating system.
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi Q,

One of the choices below may be of interest to you
as workarounds or replacements with Office 2003
for the discontinued MS Office Shortcut Bar (OSB)
[originally the MS Office Manager (MOM)]


Hi M.M.,

Over the last couple versions of Office and Windows the
Office Shortcut Bar was having some issues with other
software and the design layout of Windows screens changed
to focus users on the taskbars and the abilities of Windows
toolbars to be customized to do similar functions.

For working with Office 2003 you can use several approaches
1. You can use a 3rd party product (some are free).

2. You can customize or create custom Windows toolbars that
can break away to sit separately from the taskbar or use
the taskbar.

3. You can use an older version of Office's shortcut bar as is

Here is some information that may be helpful on each approach.

1. 3rd party products.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Note: If you try or choose one of the above tools please
post back to let others know how you like it as an
Office Shortcut Bar (OSB )replacement. It may help
others with the same issue and help to update the
information here.

There are both shareware and free 3rd party toolbars
that some folks say they like using. Here is a list of
some of them.

a. JetAudio Toolbar.

Similar in use to the Office Shortcut Bar(OSB)
http://jetaudio.com/products/jettoolbar

b. H-Menu, also similar to the OSB, but with more
features you can configure if you want to:
http://h-menu.com/main_en.htm

c. Powerpro

Similar in appearance to the OSB and can autohide,
but with additional popup configuration choices and
some more detailed (techie?) optional features.
http://windowspowerpro.com/xsamplebar.htm

d. Slickrun
While it doesn't look like the OSB it can be
a useful alternative once you're used to it.
For example you can type in 'Word' in the box
and it will launch Word, or you can type 'google'
and it launches your browser to the Google search page.
It can be locked in position on your desktop or it
can minimize to the system tray as an icon as well
as has a hotkey to pop it up.
http://bayden.com/slickrun/

e. Perfect Menu
http://www.pitrinec.com/pmeindex.htm

f. Drag Strip
http://www.aladdinsys.com/win/dragstrip/index.html


g. Objectdock (Mac OS 'like').
http://www.stardock.com/products/objectdock/


2. Use Windows Built-In Toolbar Customization Features
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
a. You can use the Quicklaunch toolbar in
Windows and drag copies of your Office shortcuts
to it, or

b. Create a new Toolbar by right clicking
on a blank spot on the Windows Taskbar, unlocking it
and creating a new toolbar(folder) and drag the Office
or other shortcut icons to it. You can tear off that
toolbar and place it and size it as needed anywhere on
your desktop.

3. Use an Older version of the Office Shortcut Bar

If you have an older version of Office with the shortcut
bar and running MSOffice.exe from Start=>Run doesn't
start it, you can do a custom install of the old version
of Office and choose just the Shortcut bar. (Note that this
may put a great deal of the core old Office files back on
the PC if you've removed the older version). The OSB
should work, but will be 'as is' and doesn't support
things like high resolution icons. You may also be
prompted to install updates to the older Office version
when visiting http://officeupdate.com


========
With my new edition of M$ Office, there is no toolbar.
Can anyone recommend a freeware toolbar out there? I really miss this
feature.
Thanks.
~Q >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

Office 2003 Editions explained
http://www.microsoft.com/uk/office/editions.mspx
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi Q,

One of the choices below may be of interest to you
as workarounds or replacements with Office 2003
for the discontinued MS Office Shortcut Bar (OSB)
[originally the MS Office Manager (MOM)]


Hi M.M.,

Over the last couple versions of Office and Windows the
Office Shortcut Bar was having some issues with other
software and the design layout of Windows screens changed
to focus users on the taskbars and the abilities of Windows
toolbars to be customized to do similar functions.

For working with Office 2003 you can use several approaches
1. You can use a 3rd party product (some are free).

2. You can customize or create custom Windows toolbars that
can break away to sit separately from the taskbar or use
the taskbar.

3. You can use an older version of Office's shortcut bar as is

Here is some information that may be helpful on each approach.

1. 3rd party products.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Note: If you try or choose one of the above tools please
post back to let others know how you like it as an
Office Shortcut Bar (OSB )replacement. It may help
others with the same issue and help to update the
information here.

There are both shareware and free 3rd party toolbars
that some folks say they like using. Here is a list of
some of them.

a. JetAudio Toolbar.

Similar in use to the Office Shortcut Bar(OSB)
http://jetaudio.com/products/jettoolbar

b. H-Menu, also similar to the OSB, but with more
features you can configure if you want to:
http://h-menu.com/main_en.htm

c. Powerpro

Similar in appearance to the OSB and can autohide,
but with additional popup configuration choices and
some more detailed (techie?) optional features.
http://windowspowerpro.com/xsamplebar.htm

d. Slickrun
While it doesn't look like the OSB it can be
a useful alternative once you're used to it.
For example you can type in 'Word' in the box
and it will launch Word, or you can type 'google'
and it launches your browser to the Google search page.
It can be locked in position on your desktop or it
can minimize to the system tray as an icon as well
as has a hotkey to pop it up.
http://bayden.com/slickrun/

e. Perfect Menu
http://www.pitrinec.com/pmeindex.htm

f. Drag Strip
http://www.aladdinsys.com/win/dragstrip/index.html


g. Objectdock (Mac OS 'like').
http://www.stardock.com/products/objectdock/


2. Use Windows Built-In Toolbar Customization Features
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
a. You can use the Quicklaunch toolbar in
Windows and drag copies of your Office shortcuts
to it, or

b. Create a new Toolbar by right clicking
on a blank spot on the Windows Taskbar, unlocking it
and creating a new toolbar(folder) and drag the Office
or other shortcut icons to it. You can tear off that
toolbar and place it and size it as needed anywhere on
your desktop.

3. Use an Older version of the Office Shortcut Bar

If you have an older version of Office with the shortcut
bar and running MSOffice.exe from Start=>Run doesn't
start it, you can do a custom install of the old version
of Office and choose just the Shortcut bar. (Note that this
may put a great deal of the core old Office files back on
the PC if you've removed the older version). The OSB
should work, but will be 'as is' and doesn't support
things like high resolution icons. You may also be
prompted to install updates to the older Office version
when visiting http://officeupdate.com


========
With my new edition of M$ Office, there is no toolbar.
Can anyone recommend a freeware toolbar out there? I really miss this
feature.
Thanks.
~Q >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

Office 2003 Editions explained
http://www.microsoft.com/uk/office/editions.mspx
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi Q,

One of the choices below may be of interest to you
as workarounds or replacements with Office 2003
for the discontinued MS Office Shortcut Bar (OSB)
[originally the MS Office Manager (MOM)]


Hi M.M.,

Over the last couple versions of Office and Windows the
Office Shortcut Bar was having some issues with other
software and the design layout of Windows screens changed
to focus users on the taskbars and the abilities of Windows
toolbars to be customized to do similar functions.

For working with Office 2003 you can use several approaches
1. You can use a 3rd party product (some are free).

2. You can customize or create custom Windows toolbars that
can break away to sit separately from the taskbar or use
the taskbar.

3. You can use an older version of Office's shortcut bar as is

Here is some information that may be helpful on each approach.

1. 3rd party products.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Note: If you try or choose one of the above tools please
post back to let others know how you like it as an
Office Shortcut Bar (OSB )replacement. It may help
others with the same issue and help to update the
information here.

There are both shareware and free 3rd party toolbars
that some folks say they like using. Here is a list of
some of them.

a. JetAudio Toolbar.

Similar in use to the Office Shortcut Bar(OSB)
http://jetaudio.com/products/jettoolbar

b. H-Menu, also similar to the OSB, but with more
features you can configure if you want to:
http://h-menu.com/main_en.htm

c. Powerpro

Similar in appearance to the OSB and can autohide,
but with additional popup configuration choices and
some more detailed (techie?) optional features.
http://windowspowerpro.com/xsamplebar.htm

d. Slickrun
While it doesn't look like the OSB it can be
a useful alternative once you're used to it.
For example you can type in 'Word' in the box
and it will launch Word, or you can type 'google'
and it launches your browser to the Google search page.
It can be locked in position on your desktop or it
can minimize to the system tray as an icon as well
as has a hotkey to pop it up.
http://bayden.com/slickrun/

e. Perfect Menu
http://www.pitrinec.com/pmeindex.htm

f. Drag Strip
http://www.aladdinsys.com/win/dragstrip/index.html


g. Objectdock (Mac OS 'like').
http://www.stardock.com/products/objectdock/


2. Use Windows Built-In Toolbar Customization Features
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
a. You can use the Quicklaunch toolbar in
Windows and drag copies of your Office shortcuts
to it, or

b. Create a new Toolbar by right clicking
on a blank spot on the Windows Taskbar, unlocking it
and creating a new toolbar(folder) and drag the Office
or other shortcut icons to it. You can tear off that
toolbar and place it and size it as needed anywhere on
your desktop.

3. Use an Older version of the Office Shortcut Bar

If you have an older version of Office with the shortcut
bar and running MSOffice.exe from Start=>Run doesn't
start it, you can do a custom install of the old version
of Office and choose just the Shortcut bar. (Note that this
may put a great deal of the core old Office files back on
the PC if you've removed the older version). The OSB
should work, but will be 'as is' and doesn't support
things like high resolution icons. You may also be
prompted to install updates to the older Office version
when visiting http://officeupdate.com


========
With my new edition of M$ Office, there is no toolbar.
Can anyone recommend a freeware toolbar out there? I really miss this
feature.
Thanks.
~Q >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

Office 2003 Editions explained
http://www.microsoft.com/uk/office/editions.mspx
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi Q,

One of the choices below may be of interest to you
as workarounds or replacements with Office 2003
for the discontinued MS Office Shortcut Bar (OSB)
[originally the MS Office Manager (MOM)]


Hi M.M.,

Over the last couple versions of Office and Windows the
Office Shortcut Bar was having some issues with other
software and the design layout of Windows screens changed
to focus users on the taskbars and the abilities of Windows
toolbars to be customized to do similar functions.

For working with Office 2003 you can use several approaches
1. You can use a 3rd party product (some are free).

2. You can customize or create custom Windows toolbars that
can break away to sit separately from the taskbar or use
the taskbar.

3. You can use an older version of Office's shortcut bar as is

Here is some information that may be helpful on each approach.

1. 3rd party products.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Note: If you try or choose one of the above tools please
post back to let others know how you like it as an
Office Shortcut Bar (OSB )replacement. It may help
others with the same issue and help to update the
information here.

There are both shareware and free 3rd party toolbars
that some folks say they like using. Here is a list of
some of them.

a. JetAudio Toolbar.

Similar in use to the Office Shortcut Bar(OSB)
http://jetaudio.com/products/jettoolbar

b. H-Menu, also similar to the OSB, but with more
features you can configure if you want to:
http://h-menu.com/main_en.htm

c. Powerpro

Similar in appearance to the OSB and can autohide,
but with additional popup configuration choices and
some more detailed (techie?) optional features.
http://windowspowerpro.com/xsamplebar.htm

d. Slickrun
While it doesn't look like the OSB it can be
a useful alternative once you're used to it.
For example you can type in 'Word' in the box
and it will launch Word, or you can type 'google'
and it launches your browser to the Google search page.
It can be locked in position on your desktop or it
can minimize to the system tray as an icon as well
as has a hotkey to pop it up.
http://bayden.com/slickrun/

e. Perfect Menu
http://www.pitrinec.com/pmeindex.htm

f. Drag Strip
http://www.aladdinsys.com/win/dragstrip/index.html


g. Objectdock (Mac OS 'like').
http://www.stardock.com/products/objectdock/


2. Use Windows Built-In Toolbar Customization Features
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
a. You can use the Quicklaunch toolbar in
Windows and drag copies of your Office shortcuts
to it, or

b. Create a new Toolbar by right clicking
on a blank spot on the Windows Taskbar, unlocking it
and creating a new toolbar(folder) and drag the Office
or other shortcut icons to it. You can tear off that
toolbar and place it and size it as needed anywhere on
your desktop.

3. Use an Older version of the Office Shortcut Bar

If you have an older version of Office with the shortcut
bar and running MSOffice.exe from Start=>Run doesn't
start it, you can do a custom install of the old version
of Office and choose just the Shortcut bar. (Note that this
may put a great deal of the core old Office files back on
the PC if you've removed the older version). The OSB
should work, but will be 'as is' and doesn't support
things like high resolution icons. You may also be
prompted to install updates to the older Office version
when visiting http://officeupdate.com


========
With my new edition of M$ Office, there is no toolbar.
Can anyone recommend a freeware toolbar out there? I really miss this
feature.
Thanks.
~Q >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

Office 2003 Editions explained
http://www.microsoft.com/uk/office/editions.mspx
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi Q,

One of the choices below may be of interest to you
as workarounds or replacements with Office 2003
for the discontinued MS Office Shortcut Bar (OSB)
[originally the MS Office Manager (MOM)]


Hi M.M.,

Over the last couple versions of Office and Windows the
Office Shortcut Bar was having some issues with other
software and the design layout of Windows screens changed
to focus users on the taskbars and the abilities of Windows
toolbars to be customized to do similar functions.

For working with Office 2003 you can use several approaches
1. You can use a 3rd party product (some are free).

2. You can customize or create custom Windows toolbars that
can break away to sit separately from the taskbar or use
the taskbar.

3. You can use an older version of Office's shortcut bar as is

Here is some information that may be helpful on each approach.

1. 3rd party products.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Note: If you try or choose one of the above tools please
post back to let others know how you like it as an
Office Shortcut Bar (OSB )replacement. It may help
others with the same issue and help to update the
information here.

There are both shareware and free 3rd party toolbars
that some folks say they like using. Here is a list of
some of them.

a. JetAudio Toolbar.

Similar in use to the Office Shortcut Bar(OSB)
http://jetaudio.com/products/jettoolbar

b. H-Menu, also similar to the OSB, but with more
features you can configure if you want to:
http://h-menu.com/main_en.htm

c. Powerpro

Similar in appearance to the OSB and can autohide,
but with additional popup configuration choices and
some more detailed (techie?) optional features.
http://windowspowerpro.com/xsamplebar.htm

d. Slickrun
While it doesn't look like the OSB it can be
a useful alternative once you're used to it.
For example you can type in 'Word' in the box
and it will launch Word, or you can type 'google'
and it launches your browser to the Google search page.
It can be locked in position on your desktop or it
can minimize to the system tray as an icon as well
as has a hotkey to pop it up.
http://bayden.com/slickrun/

e. Perfect Menu
http://www.pitrinec.com/pmeindex.htm

f. Drag Strip
http://www.aladdinsys.com/win/dragstrip/index.html


g. Objectdock (Mac OS 'like').
http://www.stardock.com/products/objectdock/


2. Use Windows Built-In Toolbar Customization Features
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
a. You can use the Quicklaunch toolbar in
Windows and drag copies of your Office shortcuts
to it, or

b. Create a new Toolbar by right clicking
on a blank spot on the Windows Taskbar, unlocking it
and creating a new toolbar(folder) and drag the Office
or other shortcut icons to it. You can tear off that
toolbar and place it and size it as needed anywhere on
your desktop.

3. Use an Older version of the Office Shortcut Bar

If you have an older version of Office with the shortcut
bar and running MSOffice.exe from Start=>Run doesn't
start it, you can do a custom install of the old version
of Office and choose just the Shortcut bar. (Note that this
may put a great deal of the core old Office files back on
the PC if you've removed the older version). The OSB
should work, but will be 'as is' and doesn't support
things like high resolution icons. You may also be
prompted to install updates to the older Office version
when visiting http://officeupdate.com


========
With my new edition of M$ Office, there is no toolbar.
Can anyone recommend a freeware toolbar out there? I really miss this
feature.
Thanks.
~Q >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

Office 2003 Editions explained
http://www.microsoft.com/uk/office/editions.mspx
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi Q,

One of the choices below may be of interest to you
as workarounds or replacements with Office 2003
for the discontinued MS Office Shortcut Bar (OSB)
[originally the MS Office Manager (MOM)]


Hi M.M.,

Over the last couple versions of Office and Windows the
Office Shortcut Bar was having some issues with other
software and the design layout of Windows screens changed
to focus users on the taskbars and the abilities of Windows
toolbars to be customized to do similar functions.

For working with Office 2003 you can use several approaches
1. You can use a 3rd party product (some are free).

2. You can customize or create custom Windows toolbars that
can break away to sit separately from the taskbar or use
the taskbar.

3. You can use an older version of Office's shortcut bar as is

Here is some information that may be helpful on each approach.

1. 3rd party products.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Note: If you try or choose one of the above tools please
post back to let others know how you like it as an
Office Shortcut Bar (OSB )replacement. It may help
others with the same issue and help to update the
information here.

There are both shareware and free 3rd party toolbars
that some folks say they like using. Here is a list of
some of them.

a. JetAudio Toolbar.

Similar in use to the Office Shortcut Bar(OSB)
http://jetaudio.com/products/jettoolbar

b. H-Menu, also similar to the OSB, but with more
features you can configure if you want to:
http://h-menu.com/main_en.htm

c. Powerpro

Similar in appearance to the OSB and can autohide,
but with additional popup configuration choices and
some more detailed (techie?) optional features.
http://windowspowerpro.com/xsamplebar.htm

d. Slickrun
While it doesn't look like the OSB it can be
a useful alternative once you're used to it.
For example you can type in 'Word' in the box
and it will launch Word, or you can type 'google'
and it launches your browser to the Google search page.
It can be locked in position on your desktop or it
can minimize to the system tray as an icon as well
as has a hotkey to pop it up.
http://bayden.com/slickrun/

e. Perfect Menu
http://www.pitrinec.com/pmeindex.htm

f. Drag Strip
http://www.aladdinsys.com/win/dragstrip/index.html


g. Objectdock (Mac OS 'like').
http://www.stardock.com/products/objectdock/


2. Use Windows Built-In Toolbar Customization Features
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
a. You can use the Quicklaunch toolbar in
Windows and drag copies of your Office shortcuts
to it, or

b. Create a new Toolbar by right clicking
on a blank spot on the Windows Taskbar, unlocking it
and creating a new toolbar(folder) and drag the Office
or other shortcut icons to it. You can tear off that
toolbar and place it and size it as needed anywhere on
your desktop.

3. Use an Older version of the Office Shortcut Bar

If you have an older version of Office with the shortcut
bar and running MSOffice.exe from Start=>Run doesn't
start it, you can do a custom install of the old version
of Office and choose just the Shortcut bar. (Note that this
may put a great deal of the core old Office files back on
the PC if you've removed the older version). The OSB
should work, but will be 'as is' and doesn't support
things like high resolution icons. You may also be
prompted to install updates to the older Office version
when visiting http://officeupdate.com


========
With my new edition of M$ Office, there is no toolbar.
Can anyone recommend a freeware toolbar out there? I really miss this
feature.
Thanks.
~Q >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

Office 2003 Editions explained
http://www.microsoft.com/uk/office/editions.mspx
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi Q,

One of the choices below may be of interest to you
as workarounds or replacements with Office 2003
for the discontinued MS Office Shortcut Bar (OSB)
[originally the MS Office Manager (MOM)]


Hi M.M.,

Over the last couple versions of Office and Windows the
Office Shortcut Bar was having some issues with other
software and the design layout of Windows screens changed
to focus users on the taskbars and the abilities of Windows
toolbars to be customized to do similar functions.

For working with Office 2003 you can use several approaches
1. You can use a 3rd party product (some are free).

2. You can customize or create custom Windows toolbars that
can break away to sit separately from the taskbar or use
the taskbar.

3. You can use an older version of Office's shortcut bar as is

Here is some information that may be helpful on each approach.

1. 3rd party products.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Note: If you try or choose one of the above tools please
post back to let others know how you like it as an
Office Shortcut Bar (OSB )replacement. It may help
others with the same issue and help to update the
information here.

There are both shareware and free 3rd party toolbars
that some folks say they like using. Here is a list of
some of them.

a. JetAudio Toolbar.

Similar in use to the Office Shortcut Bar(OSB)
http://jetaudio.com/products/jettoolbar

b. H-Menu, also similar to the OSB, but with more
features you can configure if you want to:
http://h-menu.com/main_en.htm

c. Powerpro

Similar in appearance to the OSB and can autohide,
but with additional popup configuration choices and
some more detailed (techie?) optional features.
http://windowspowerpro.com/xsamplebar.htm

d. Slickrun
While it doesn't look like the OSB it can be
a useful alternative once you're used to it.
For example you can type in 'Word' in the box
and it will launch Word, or you can type 'google'
and it launches your browser to the Google search page.
It can be locked in position on your desktop or it
can minimize to the system tray as an icon as well
as has a hotkey to pop it up.
http://bayden.com/slickrun/

e. Perfect Menu
http://www.pitrinec.com/pmeindex.htm

f. Drag Strip
http://www.aladdinsys.com/win/dragstrip/index.html


g. Objectdock (Mac OS 'like').
http://www.stardock.com/products/objectdock/


2. Use Windows Built-In Toolbar Customization Features
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
a. You can use the Quicklaunch toolbar in
Windows and drag copies of your Office shortcuts
to it, or

b. Create a new Toolbar by right clicking
on a blank spot on the Windows Taskbar, unlocking it
and creating a new toolbar(folder) and drag the Office
or other shortcut icons to it. You can tear off that
toolbar and place it and size it as needed anywhere on
your desktop.

3. Use an Older version of the Office Shortcut Bar

If you have an older version of Office with the shortcut
bar and running MSOffice.exe from Start=>Run doesn't
start it, you can do a custom install of the old version
of Office and choose just the Shortcut bar. (Note that this
may put a great deal of the core old Office files back on
the PC if you've removed the older version). The OSB
should work, but will be 'as is' and doesn't support
things like high resolution icons. You may also be
prompted to install updates to the older Office version
when visiting http://officeupdate.com


========
With my new edition of M$ Office, there is no toolbar.
Can anyone recommend a freeware toolbar out there? I really miss this
feature.
Thanks.
~Q >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

Office 2003 Editions explained
http://www.microsoft.com/uk/office/editions.mspx
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi Q,

One of the choices below may be of interest to you
as workarounds or replacements with Office 2003
for the discontinued MS Office Shortcut Bar (OSB)
[originally the MS Office Manager (MOM)]


Hi M.M.,

Over the last couple versions of Office and Windows the
Office Shortcut Bar was having some issues with other
software and the design layout of Windows screens changed
to focus users on the taskbars and the abilities of Windows
toolbars to be customized to do similar functions.

For working with Office 2003 you can use several approaches
1. You can use a 3rd party product (some are free).

2. You can customize or create custom Windows toolbars that
can break away to sit separately from the taskbar or use
the taskbar.

3. You can use an older version of Office's shortcut bar as is

Here is some information that may be helpful on each approach.

1. 3rd party products.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Note: If you try or choose one of the above tools please
post back to let others know how you like it as an
Office Shortcut Bar (OSB )replacement. It may help
others with the same issue and help to update the
information here.

There are both shareware and free 3rd party toolbars
that some folks say they like using. Here is a list of
some of them.

a. JetAudio Toolbar.

Similar in use to the Office Shortcut Bar(OSB)
http://jetaudio.com/products/jettoolbar

b. H-Menu, also similar to the OSB, but with more
features you can configure if you want to:
http://h-menu.com/main_en.htm

c. Powerpro

Similar in appearance to the OSB and can autohide,
but with additional popup configuration choices and
some more detailed (techie?) optional features.
http://windowspowerpro.com/xsamplebar.htm

d. Slickrun
While it doesn't look like the OSB it can be
a useful alternative once you're used to it.
For example you can type in 'Word' in the box
and it will launch Word, or you can type 'google'
and it launches your browser to the Google search page.
It can be locked in position on your desktop or it
can minimize to the system tray as an icon as well
as has a hotkey to pop it up.
http://bayden.com/slickrun/

e. Perfect Menu
http://www.pitrinec.com/pmeindex.htm

f. Drag Strip
http://www.aladdinsys.com/win/dragstrip/index.html


g. Objectdock (Mac OS 'like').
http://www.stardock.com/products/objectdock/


2. Use Windows Built-In Toolbar Customization Features
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
a. You can use the Quicklaunch toolbar in
Windows and drag copies of your Office shortcuts
to it, or

b. Create a new Toolbar by right clicking
on a blank spot on the Windows Taskbar, unlocking it
and creating a new toolbar(folder) and drag the Office
or other shortcut icons to it. You can tear off that
toolbar and place it and size it as needed anywhere on
your desktop.

3. Use an Older version of the Office Shortcut Bar

If you have an older version of Office with the shortcut
bar and running MSOffice.exe from Start=>Run doesn't
start it, you can do a custom install of the old version
of Office and choose just the Shortcut bar. (Note that this
may put a great deal of the core old Office files back on
the PC if you've removed the older version). The OSB
should work, but will be 'as is' and doesn't support
things like high resolution icons. You may also be
prompted to install updates to the older Office version
when visiting http://officeupdate.com


========
With my new edition of M$ Office, there is no toolbar.
Can anyone recommend a freeware toolbar out there? I really miss this
feature.
Thanks.
~Q >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

Office 2003 Editions explained
http://www.microsoft.com/uk/office/editions.mspx
 
B

Bob Buckland ?:-\)

Hi Q,

One of the choices below may be of interest to you
as workarounds or replacements with Office 2003
for the discontinued MS Office Shortcut Bar (OSB)
[originally the MS Office Manager (MOM)]


Hi M.M.,

Over the last couple versions of Office and Windows the
Office Shortcut Bar was having some issues with other
software and the design layout of Windows screens changed
to focus users on the taskbars and the abilities of Windows
toolbars to be customized to do similar functions.

For working with Office 2003 you can use several approaches
1. You can use a 3rd party product (some are free).

2. You can customize or create custom Windows toolbars that
can break away to sit separately from the taskbar or use
the taskbar.

3. You can use an older version of Office's shortcut bar as is

Here is some information that may be helpful on each approach.

1. 3rd party products.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Note: If you try or choose one of the above tools please
post back to let others know how you like it as an
Office Shortcut Bar (OSB )replacement. It may help
others with the same issue and help to update the
information here.

There are both shareware and free 3rd party toolbars
that some folks say they like using. Here is a list of
some of them.

a. JetAudio Toolbar.

Similar in use to the Office Shortcut Bar(OSB)
http://jetaudio.com/products/jettoolbar

b. H-Menu, also similar to the OSB, but with more
features you can configure if you want to:
http://h-menu.com/main_en.htm

c. Powerpro

Similar in appearance to the OSB and can autohide,
but with additional popup configuration choices and
some more detailed (techie?) optional features.
http://windowspowerpro.com/xsamplebar.htm

d. Slickrun
While it doesn't look like the OSB it can be
a useful alternative once you're used to it.
For example you can type in 'Word' in the box
and it will launch Word, or you can type 'google'
and it launches your browser to the Google search page.
It can be locked in position on your desktop or it
can minimize to the system tray as an icon as well
as has a hotkey to pop it up.
http://bayden.com/slickrun/

e. Perfect Menu
http://www.pitrinec.com/pmeindex.htm

f. Drag Strip
http://www.aladdinsys.com/win/dragstrip/index.html


g. Objectdock (Mac OS 'like').
http://www.stardock.com/products/objectdock/


2. Use Windows Built-In Toolbar Customization Features
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
a. You can use the Quicklaunch toolbar in
Windows and drag copies of your Office shortcuts
to it, or

b. Create a new Toolbar by right clicking
on a blank spot on the Windows Taskbar, unlocking it
and creating a new toolbar(folder) and drag the Office
or other shortcut icons to it. You can tear off that
toolbar and place it and size it as needed anywhere on
your desktop.

3. Use an Older version of the Office Shortcut Bar

If you have an older version of Office with the shortcut
bar and running MSOffice.exe from Start=>Run doesn't
start it, you can do a custom install of the old version
of Office and choose just the Shortcut bar. (Note that this
may put a great deal of the core old Office files back on
the PC if you've removed the older version). The OSB
should work, but will be 'as is' and doesn't support
things like high resolution icons. You may also be
prompted to install updates to the older Office version
when visiting http://officeupdate.com


========
With my new edition of M$ Office, there is no toolbar.
Can anyone recommend a freeware toolbar out there? I really miss this
feature.
Thanks.
~Q >>
--
Let us know if this helped you,

Bob Buckland ?:)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*

Office 2003 Editions explained
http://www.microsoft.com/uk/office/editions.mspx
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top