Importance of Digital Marketing

 

Video provides a powerful way to help you prove your point. When you click Online Video, you can paste in the embed code for the video you want to add. You can also type a keyword to search online for the video that best fits your document.


To make your document look professionally produced, Word provides header, footer, cover page, and text box designs that complement each other. For example, you can add a matching cover page, header, and sidebar. Click Insert and then choose the elements you want from the different galleries.

Themes and styles also help keep your document coordinated. When you click Design and choose a new Theme, the pictures, charts, and SmartArt graphics change to match your new theme. When you apply styles, your headings change to match the new theme.

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t’s hard to believe, but it was only 100 years ago — back in 1923 — that humanity first realized that the Milky Way galaxy didn’t encompass the entire Universe. That key discovery was made by Edwin Hubble, who, while observing what was then known as the Great Nebula in Andromeda, recognized that a periodic light “flare” he was seeing wasn’t a nova as he originally thought, but was rather a variable star located much, much farther away than any of the Milky Way’s stars. It was the first slam-dunk evidence that these spiral (and elliptical) nebulae, observed for centuries, were actually galaxies all unto themselves, or as they were called at the time, “island universes.”



Today, we now know that the observable Universe contains several trillion galaxies, with the earliest dating back to when the Universe was less than 3% of its present age. While we’ve only mapped out a tiny fraction of all the galaxies that exist, we’ve seen enough that we can not only describe what the Universe is like at each moment in cosmic history, but we can compose 3D visual reconstructions that show how the Universe’s galaxies appear and grew up over time. With a new, spectacular fly-through video released by NASA and the JWST CEERS (Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science) team, we can all now see what the Universe looks like for ourselves: from the Milky Way to farther back than ever before.

Save time in Word with new buttons that show up where you need them. To change the way a picture fits in your document, click it and a button for layout options appears next to it. When you work on a table, click where you want to add a row or a column, and then click the plus sign.

Reading is easier, too, in the new Reading view. You can collapse parts of the document and focus on the text you want. If you need to stop reading before you reach the end, Word remembers where you left off - even on another device.

 

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