Add to Cart Keyboard stickers with the most important shortcuts & hotkeys in Microsoft Office Outlook. Stickers are designed to match 2007, 2010, 2013, 2016 and 2017 versions. This is a great tool for any power Outlook user and office managers/assistants. These stickers will help you or your team to work faster up to 80% and can do wonders in your business. Easy to apply and remove without permanent residues.
Incredible durability. Captions and colors remain intact even after intense use. Matte finish to improve low-light legibility Stickers in Mac version are designed to fit specified Apple/MacBook keyboard. Stickers in Windows Universal version are designed to fit almost every keyboard, though they are not perfect fit. Single stickers can be smaller than a key - this is normal. Size of single sticker is 0.47x0.51 in (12x13 mm). Stickers in Windows Custom version are designed to perfectly fit specified laptop keyboard.
Please allow 5-12 business days for this item to ship. Similar items you'll like. These are example layouts using standardized MacBook keyboard. All details (like key shapes, spacebar size, etc.) will be adjusted exactly to your MacBook/Apple Keyboard model.
If you want to switch layouts, select desired layout and leave us a note to order with your enter/return key shape. If you have doubts, please send us a photo of your keyboard Rectangular enter key US English Used in the US, Canada (apart from Quebec), Australia, Puerto Rico, Guam, Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, India, Hong Kong, New Zealand and many other countries. Chinese (Taiwanese) Used in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan. Colemak US Alternate layout to English QWERTY, used for increased typing speed.
'C: Program Files Microsoft Office OFFICE11 OUTLOOK.EXE' /c ipm.note /m dianep. Create a custom Send to shortcut tutorial. Follow these steps to create a Send to shortcut to a custom form. Open a new message form. Select the account you want to use and delete the signature. If you always want to use the same subject, enter it.
Dvorak US Alternate layout to English QWERTY, used for increased typing speed. Korean Used in South Korea. Thai Used in Thailand. 7-shaped enter key US International Used in Poland and some other countries. We advise to choose this layout, if you want to switch from any European layout to standard English keyboard. UK English Used in Great Britain, Ireland and Malta.
Arabic Used in Arabic-speaking countries: Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Oman. Bulgarian Used in Bulgaria. Croatian Used in Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia (QWERTY variant), Slovenia, and Montenegro. Czech Used in the Czech Republic (Czechia).
Danish Used in Denmark, Greenland and Faroese Islands. Dutch Used in the Netherlands. French/Belgian Used in France, Belgium, Morocco, Algeria, French Guyana, Chad, Cote d'Ivoire. It's also used in parts of Luxembourg and Switzerland. French Canadian Used by French-speaking citizens of Canada, mainly in Quebec. German Used in Germany, Austria, Liechtenstein, and part of Switzerland.
Greek Used in Greece. Israeli (Hebrew) Used in Israel. Hungarian Used in Hungary.
Icelandic Used in Iceland. Italian Used in Italy and Malta. Norwegian Used in Norway and Svalbard. Portuguese Used in Portugal and Brazil (although there is also US English layout in use). Romanian Used in Romania, although US English and US International layouts are also very popular. Russian Used in Russia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kirgistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine and Belarus. Slovak Used in Slovakia.
Spanish Used in Spain and latin american countries: Mexico, Peru, Venezuela, Colombia, Chile, Argentina, Cuba, Belize, Guatemala, Salvador, Honduras, Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Surinam, Ecuador, Bolivia and Paraguay. Swedish/Finnish Used in Sweden and Finland. Found also in Estonia and Latvia.
Swiss Used in Switzerland. Turkish Q Used in Turkey.
Japanese enter key Japanese Used in Japan, but US English layout is also popular. Turn your MacBook or Apple keyboard on its back and in text starting with 'Designed by.' Find 'Model'.
Microsoft Outlook is arguably the most popular email client on the planet. From corporations to schools, its reach is far and wide. Since it’s likely that you already use it to some degree, we’ve compiled eight of the best, must know tips and tricks for you to make you workflow more efficient. UI Tips Enable dark mode If you want to save some eyestrain by reducing white backgrounds, Outlook can help with its Dark Gray theme.
From the main page, hit “File”, then “Options”. Under the “General” tab, change Office Theme to “Dark Gray” and voila! Your monitor is no longer a death ray at night. Add an Editing Language Want Outlook to provide grammar and spelling suggestions in other languages?
Simply add it. From the main page, hit “File”, then “Options”. Under the “Language” tab, click on the “Add additional editing languages” drop-down menu and select the language of your choice. Once selected, your new editing language should appear in the box above it. Click on “Not installed” under the proofing column.
This will take you to the Language Accessory Package download page. Download and install the language pack. Go back to the Language screen in Outlook, select the new proofing language and click on “Set as Default”. Restart Outlook to make the changes. Clean up clutter Set up Auto Archive If you keep a ton of emails offline, Auto Archiving can help you save disk space by auto compressing emails that are beyond a certain age.
You can decompress them at any time. From the main page, go to the “Folders” tab and Click on “AutoArchive Settings”.
In the box that pops up, check the “Archive this folder using these settings” radio button, choose a cutoff date, and choose an action to perform for old emails. Remove Duplicate E-mails If you merged an old Outlook database with your current account and are now seeing duplicate emails, you can clear them out with this easy function. From the main page, go to the “Folders” tab and click on “Clean Up Folder”, and “Clean Up Folder” again. Hit “Clean Up Folder” one last time in the warning box that comes up. Do Things Faster Create a rule Rules is a huge part of what makes Outlook rule (sorry) and save users the arduous task of moving emails manually. It sort emails to its respective folders based on a whole bunch of conditions.
From the main page, go to the “Home” tab, click on “Rules”, and click on “Create Rule”. In the Create Rule window that appears, select your basic criteria, check “Move the item to folder” checkbox, and click on “Select Folder”. In the following window, choose the folder you’d like this type of message to move into and click “OK”. Use Quick Step Quick Step is arguably the best thing to happen to Outlook since its creation. In a nutshell, a Quick Step lets you perform multiple functions with a click or hotkey, saving time in the process. From the main page, go to the “Home” tab and click on “Create New” in the “Quick Steps” box. In the Edit Quick Step window, select the functions you want the Quick Step to perform and press “Finish” once you’re done.
Your new Quick Step will appear in the “Quick Steps” box under the “Home” tab. What’s also awesome is that you can program a shortcut to it for even faster access. Pin favorite folders to the top You can drag all the inboxes from different email accounts and pin them to the top of the Folder Pane. This is a feature I embarrassingly did not realize existed until a few days ago.
Enable Bcc recipients Bcc (blind carbon copy) allows you to send the same email to multiple recipients without revealing the address of all recipients. This function isn’t enabled by default, but all you have to do is hit a button to make it show. Start a new mail.
In the composing window, go to the “Options” tab, and click on Bcc. The full list of address inserted into the Bcc box will not appear for all recipients. Bonus: Learn these Shortcuts If there’s a sign language for speed, then it’d be hand positions for various keyboard shortcuts. Here’s a list of helpful keyboard shortcuts for Outlook. Ctrl+1/2/3/4: Switch between Mail, Calendar, People, and To-Do views.
Ctrl+E: Activate search. Ctrl+Shift+E: Create a new folder. Ctrl+Shift+C: Create a new contact. Ctrl+Shift+M: Create new message.
Ctrl+F: forward. Ctrl+R: Reply. Alt+S (while composing mail): Send. F4: Find and replace. Ctrl+M: Check for new messages.
Ctrl+S: Save. Alt+S: Save and close.