For navigation, every Web browser offers back and forward buttons, generally represented by arrows in the upper left of the toolbar. You can also navigate by choosing menu commands and typing keyboard shortcuts—did you know that Command-Left arrow and Command-Right arrow work too? But if you’re using a Mac with a trackpad, you can move back and forth between Web pages—in Safari, Chrome, and Firefox—with a two-fingered swipe left (for back) or right (for forward). If you prefer, you can switch to a three-fingered swipe in System Preferences > Trackpad > More Gestures. Or, if it’s difficult for you to keep exactly two or precisely three fingers on the trackpad, you can choose to swipe with two or three fingers.
Trading Faces: Picking a Better Face for People Photos Recognizes
Apple’s Photos app is remarkably good at identifying people in your snapshots and collecting all the pictures that contain a particular person into a group in its People view. At its top level, the People view shows a thumbnail photo for each person, picking one automatically from all the available photos. Needless to say, it doesn’t always pick the photo you want, so if you dislike what’s there, you can change it easily on the Mac. In Photos, click People in the sidebar and double-click the thumbnail of the person you want to change. If necessary, click Show More to see all their photos, then Control-click the desired photo and choose Make Key Photo from the contextual menu.
Create and Name Reminders Lists to Use Them Via Siri
Do you create reminders with Siri on the iPhone? Those reminders are automatically added to your default list, which you set in Settings > Reminders > Default List. That’s great generally—“Hey Siri, remind me to update watchOS tonight at 11 PM”—but less good when you want to maintain different shopping lists. For instance, create a list called “Grocery,” and then you can tell Siri, “Put chocolate-covered bacon on my Grocery list.” Want to get fancy? Make a list called “Hardware,” and then tell Siri, “Add birdseed to my Hardware list, and remind me when I arrive at Home Depot.” You may have to pick the correct Home Depot location from a list, but then you’ll receive an alert reminding you to buy birdseed when you pull into the parking lot. To look at any list via Siri, just say something like “Show my Grocery list.”
Find the Battery Percentage Indicator on the iPhone X
Wondering what happened to the numeric battery percentage indicator on the iPhone X? The notch takes up enough space at the top of the screen that there was room only for the battery icon, which can be hard to interpret. If you want to see precisely what percentage of your battery is left, swipe down slightly from the top-right corner of the screen. That gives you the full set of indicators, including battery percentage. You don’t have to keep swiping down enough to show Control Center, but if you do, all the indicators will be there too.
Is Microsoft Office 365 a Cloud or Software as a Service?
This is a question that comes up all the time—Is Microsoft Office 365 considered a cloud solution or Software As A Service?
I guess it all comes down to interpretation. Cloud technologies are all the rage these days. Businesses now have many options when it comes to their computing environment. They can elect to go 100% and put all of their technical resources in a cloud environment, either shared or dedicated. Or, they can store protected data on a private cloud while retaining the ability to use resources from the public cloud. We call this a “hybrid cloud” in our techy circles. Or, they can elect use shared resources like Microsoft Office 365.
So, is Microsoft Office 365 a cloud solution or a Software as a Service solution? Maybe it’s a bit of both.
Many companies are making the move to Office 365. More are now benefitting from its benefits. Microsoft Office 365 provides any-sized organization the ability to use email, work on projects, share information with coworkers in the office, or with partners outside the organization. It’s now mainstream and used by businesses of all types.
However, sometimes there’s a bit confusion about where Office 365 fits in. Is it the same thing as the Cloud, or is it something else?
To understand where Microsoft Office 365 stands, it’s important to know the difference between the Cloud and Software as a Service (SaaS). The Cloud is part of the larger titled Cloud Computing. Cloud Computing is an information technology (IT) paradigm that provides users access to shared pools of system resources and higher-level services that can be rapidly provisioned with minimal management. Cloud Computing involves the sharing of resources, similar to Microsoft Office 365. For this reason, many think Office 365 is the same thing as the Cloud.
Microsoft Office 365 does allow you to access files and information in an easy-to-use, shared pool. It makes emailing and working with others easy, much like the Cloud. However, the Cloud is more than just sharing files and information. Cloud technologies can be confusing. But to keep it simple, when using the Cloud, businesses shift their onsite technologies to the Internet (either private or shared).
The Cloud frees businesses from the maintaining of servers, telephone equipment, and other IT solutions. With the Cloud, computing resources are housed online so they can be accessed from anywhere with an internet connection. With a private cloud, resources can only be used by your authorized users.
In contrast, SaaS is a licensing and delivery model where the software is provided on a subscription basis and is centrally hosted. SaaS is typically accessed by users via a web browser. When looking at Office 365, this seems like a much better fit as far as categorization goes. In other words, SaaS is an application that’s not housed on premise.
Microsoft Office 365 is a subscription-based service that’s accessed through the Internet on a web browser. It’s not stored on your computer—You must launch it through a web browser each time you use it. SaaS applications can be run in the Cloud, but this doesn’t make them a Cloud.
The confusion surrounding Microsoft Office 365 stems from the fact that it’s accessed via a web-based system -similar to the way cloud computing allows you to share and work on various projects regardless of your physical location. It’s important to remember that it’s not stored on your computer. You can access Office 365 from wherever you are, on any computing device, as long as you have a subscription and an internet connection. It’s the same with any SaaS solution.
There’s a huge difference between cloud computing and SaaS. The Cloud’s focus revolves around virtual computers/servers, data storage capacity, communications, messaging, networks, and development environments. This isn’t the case with SaaS. SaaS is an application. SaaS is better suited for our purposes, than is the Cloud is.
When comparing the two systems, look at services they offer and how they can benefit your business. This will help you understand how Office 365 can work for your business purposes. The Cloud is better suited to large enterprises, that are involved in software development or other complicated computing processes. SaaS is for those who depend on software applications, which include all of us. Office 365 is simple to use, as exemplified by its widespread use ranging from company executives to college students. For these reasons, it would be considered a Software as a Service.
Does this mean that you can only use one or the other?—That you must decide between the Cloud or various SaaS applications such as Microsoft Office 365? No, it does not. The great thing about Microsoft Office 365 is that, because it’s more like an application, it can be run on both cloud servers and physical servers.
Microsoft Office 365 is a versatile tool that offers a multitude of functions that will make your work life much easier. To understand Microsoft Office 365 just remember, it’s a web- based system that allows you to access pools of files and information, not a server focused on data storage and capacity.