Tile Application Windows In Mac Microsoft Office

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  1. Tile Application Windows In Mac Microsoft Office Free
  2. Microsoft Office Tiles Windows 10
  3. Tile Application Windows In Mac Microsoft Office 2020

The following provides information on choices to consider when tailoring desktop app tiles for Windows 8 including how to design desktop app tiles for the new Start screen and how to choose what entry points to show in the Start screen.

Design your tile for the Start screen

You can customize two aspects of your desktop app tiles: the app name, and icon. The background color is derived from the user's chosen background color and isn't programmatically customizable.

DO: Avoid truncation of your application name. Desktop tiles pinned to the Start screen can accommodate up to two lines of text each line, or about around ten characters (though this depends on the UI language), so try to keep the application name short enough to avoid truncation.

DO: Provide icons for the four supported Start screen scale values to ensure that your icons look crisp on all form factors.

ScaleTile size (in pixels)Icon size used (in pixels)
80%120 x 12048 x 48
100%150 x 15064 x 64
140%210 x 21096 x 96
180%270 x 270128 x 128
  • Apr 17, 2013  This is a simple app to remind you everyday by Tiles on Start Screen. There are a lot of scenario to use this application as: - Learning Vocabulary - To-do list - Shopping list Use just adds item they want then all of them will be display on the Main tile of this app.
  • Jun 17, 2016  EDIT: only works for icons, not for tiles:/ Ok, I just found a way but it is not really straightforward. It consists in creating a shortcut toward a homonym application for each of the Microsoft Office programs, and then deleting the homonym application and renaming the real Microsoft Office.

Download this app from Microsoft Store for Windows 10 Mobile, Windows Phone 8.1, Windows Phone 8. See screenshots, read the latest customer reviews, and compare ratings for Tile it!

DO: Embrace the Microsoft design principles. The new look and feel for icons is flat, so if you want to mimic Windows Store app icons for your desktop app, consider taking out drop shadows and so on.

DON'T: Don't avoid the use of color. While Windows Store app icons are sometimes monochromatic, we recommend using color icons for desktop apps. This helps differentiate desktop applications on the taskbar, and from other desktop app tiles in the Start screen because the background color of desktop tiles can't be customized. Do consider using more saturated colors.

Tile Application Windows In Mac Microsoft Office

Decide the right entry points to include in the Start screen

DO: Add one shortcut per app in the Start screen when the app is installed. This ensures that people can launch your app directly from the Start screen or through search. If you do not include a shortcut in the Start screen, your app becomes difficult to launch. In particular, do not add a shortcut only on the desktop. Users see the Start screen when they first login, and so placing a shortcut only on the desktop isn't as effective as including it in the Start screen.

DON'T: Don't provide multiple shortcuts to the same app. For example, don't have two shortcuts that launch an app in two different modes, such as one for Windows Internet Explorer and one for Internet Explorer with no add-ons.

DO: Minimize the number of tiles that are added as part of installation. Consider exposing other entry points to the extraneous apps. For example, instead of including a separate Settings app with a console app, access the settings through a feature in the console app.

Tile Application Windows In Mac Microsoft Office Free

DON'T: Don't put shortcuts to the following items on the Start screen:

  • Uninstallers. Users can access uninstallers through the Programs item in the Control Panel.
  • Help files. Include help topics directly in your app.
  • App settings and options. Include UI to configure settings for an app within the app or create a Control Panel item.
  • Web sites. Provide any appropriate links to information like help and technical support sites directly in your app.
  • Wizards. Wizards and other one-time configuration tasks should be launched from within the app.

DON'T: Don't create shortcuts to features or functionality that can be launched from within the app itself. For example, Language Settings can be configured from any Microsoft Office app, so it's unnecessary also to have a separate Language Settings entry point on the Start screen.

DON'T: Don't create shortcuts to items that are not executable files. Shortcuts that don't map to executables, such as shortcuts that launch web sites or help files, are filtered out of the Start screen.

Microsoft Office Tiles Windows 10

DO: If you install a suite of apps rather than a single app, add one shortcut for each app in the suite. As mentioned above, avoid creating shortcuts to secondary functionality like help information, utilities, and settings. That functionality should be included in the relevant app(s) of the suite.

DO: Create a single-level product folder for suites that contain three or more tiles. In the Apps view of the Start screen, accessible from the Search charm, applications are grouped by their top level folder. Choose a descriptive yet concise folder name; three words or fewer are recommended. Be aware that while the Apps view groups tiles and shows the folder name, this name isn't visible when a tile is pinned to the Start screen, so make your tile names sufficiently descriptive.

DON'T: Don't create a product folder if your suite contains only a single shortcut. Place your shortcut in the top-level Start folder.

DO: When installing a suite of more than three apps, consider whether any of those apps are for secondary, more irregular use and should not be pinned to the Start screen. If so, perhaps those tiles can be removed entirely, according to the guidance above, and launched from within a primary app. If you can't remove the tiles, consider unpinning them from the Start screen. That way, the shortcuts still appear in the All Apps view but don't clutter the user's Start screen.

To create add an app shortcut without pinning it to the Start screen, set the following property on the shortcut: System.AppUserModel.StartPinOption = 1. The symbolic name for 1 is APPUSERMODEL_STARTPINOPTION_NOPINONINSTALL.

This prevents the shortcut from being shown on the Start screen, but it can still be seen in the All Apps view and search results. Only the user can unpin existing shortcuts, so you must set this property during installation or immediately after placing the app on disk.

DON'T: Don't create a tile for a host or runtime for applications, like Silverlight or Java. Provide an entry point to uninstall the framework in Add/Remove Programs and provide any settings entry point in Control Panel.

Overview of Microsoft Bookings

Microsoft Bookings is an online and mobile app for small businesses who provide services to customers on an appointment basis. Examples of businesses include hair salons, dental offices, spas, law firms, financial services providers, consultants, and auto shops.

Note: Bookings is turned on by default for customers who have the Office 365 Business Premium, or Office 365 A3 and Office 365 A5 subscriptions. Bookings is also available to customers who have Office 365 Enterprise E3 and Office 365 Enterprise E5, but it is turned off by default. To turn it on, see Get access to the Office 365 business apps for enterprise subscriptions.

Bookings has three primary components:

  • A booking page where your customers can schedule appointments with the staff member who should provide the service. You can show this page on Facebook, where your customers can schedule appointments, or your own web site.

  • A set of web-based, business-facing pages where business owners can record customer preferences, manage staff lists and schedules, define services and pricing, set business hours, and customize how services and staff are scheduled

  • A business-facing mobile app where business owners can see all of their bookings, access customer lists and contact information, and make manual bookings

How Microsoft Bookings works

As with all of the Office 365 apps, Bookings is a tile in the app launcher. Click the tile to launch the app or select the app launcher, and then select Bookings.

The first time you open the app, you'll see the home page, which includes a left nav and three prominent tiles that guide you through setup and introduce new features.

Ready to get started?

Watch this video or follow the steps below to set up Bookings.

Step 1:Enter your business information

Tile Application Windows In Mac Microsoft Office 2020

Step 2:Set your scheduling policies

Step 3:Define your service offerings

Step 4: Create your staff list

Step 5:Set employee working hours

Step 6:Schedule business closures, time off, and vacation time

Step 7:Publish or unpublish your booking page

Step 8:Create and staff your bookings

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