One the downsides to having all kinds of templates and style sheets in MS Excel is that you pretty much get locked in to creating sheets that look like everyone else’s; which doesn’t do much for creativity or inspirational ideas. This is why it’s a good idea to learn how to use Excels formatting tools.

Read more:
How to Manually Format Spreadsheets in Excel 2010
Oftentimes, users of Excel find they’d like to be able to import data from an external source such as a web page, this is particularly true of web sites that list stock information. What many people don’t know is that Excel does have a facility for doing just this.

See the rest here:
How to Use Live External Web Data in Excel 2010
As the years have unfolded, Microsoft has added features, and then upgraded them with each new release of its flagship word processor, even if hardly anyone used those features; one of them is comments , a tool that can be very handy if you are someone that works with Word very often, especially if you work on long documents or collaborate with others. To be clear, comments, are embedded bits of text to remind you of something about the context of your document; they are sort of like electronic sticky notes and are useful, because they can be easily turned on and off, and because they don’t show up when you print the rest of your document.

Continued here:
How to Use Comments Effectively in Word 2007/2010
A common thing to do in Excel is to use one sheet for collecting raw data, such as sales totals, and then to use another tab, or even a workbook to create summations or reports; the thing is though, doing so requires you to have to link cells between them. Fortunately, this is a lot easier than it sounds.

See original here:
Link Cells Between Tabs and Workbooks and In Excel 2010
OpenOffice is a free, open-source product and project that competes directly with Microsoft’s Office suite of productivity software.

Visit link:
Add a Header to an OpenOffice Writer Document