Properties dialog,
double-click it and hold down [Alt].
Task Manager by pressing [Ctrl]
+ [Alt] + [Del] . You can also
get quick access to it that's less intrusive, however – rightclick the Taskbar
and choose Task Manager.
Speed up your keyboard's response
time by opening Control Panel and choosing Classic View.
Double-click Keyboard, and use the
sliders to adjust the Repeat rate and Repeat delay to suit your typing style.
You can also alter the cursor blink rate here by dragging its slider. Try out
your new settings in the text box.
Using the mouse, you can drag-“˜n-dock
windows to either side of the screen, or drag it to the top to maximize it.
These keyboard shortcuts are even faster:
Win+Left Arrow
and Win+Right Arrow dock the window to the left and right side of
the screen
Win+Up Arrow
and Win+Down Arrow maximize and restore/minimize
Win+M
minimizes everything
Alt+Up,
Alt+Left Arrow, Alt+Right Arrow navigate to parent folder,
or browse Back and Forward through folders in Explorer
Win+Home
minimizes/restores all open windows except the active window
Alt+Win+# accesses the Jump List of program number ‘#’ on the taskbar
Access Jump Lists with the Left Mouse Button
Jump Lists usually show up when you right-click on a taskbar icon.
However, they can also be accessed by holding the left mouse button and
dragging upwards. If you’re using a laptop touchpad or a touch screen,
this is convenient because you do not have to click any button to access
a context menu.
Add Videos to Start Menu
Windows 7
does not place a link to your videos on the Start Menu by default. To
add a link to your videos on the Start Menu, right-click Start, select Properties, click on Customize. In the Videos section at the bottom, choose Display as a link.
Hôm nay chúng ta cùng tìm hiểu vắn tắt ý nghĩa logo thường thấy trên bài báo khoa học xuất bản bởi
ELSEVIER, một đơn vị xuất bản báo khoa học mà cơ sở dữ liệu là ScienceDirect, bên cạnh các đơn vị khác ví dụ Thomson reuter (web of science).
Hình ảnh cây nho quấn quanh một cây lớn và chữ NON SOLUS - NOT ALONE thể hiện sự cộng tác của nhà xuất bản và nhà khoa học để có thể mang lại trái ngọt.
Lịch sử công ty:
Elsevier, the modern publishing company, was founded in 1880. It has
evolved from a small Dutch publishing house devoted to classical
scholarship into an international multimedia publishing company with
over 20,000 products for educational and professional science and
healthcare communities worldwide. Elsevier takes its name from the
original House of Elzevir, a Dutch family publishing house founded in
1580.
Elsevier's history reflects a series of collaborations in
the effort to advance science and health. These publishing
collaborations with a group of scientific visionaries – ranging from
Jules Verne to Stephen W. Hawking – created the foundation of scientific
and medical publishing.
The efforts of the men and women dedicated to disseminating and using
scientific and medical knowledge have been equally critical – the
editors, printers, librarians, nurses, doctors, engineers, information
specialists and business people at the center of scientific and health
publishing.
Relationships with other great science publishers such
as North Holland, Pergamon, Mosby, W.B. Saunders, Churchill Livingstone
and Academic Press have also been Integral to our success. These are
just a few of the companies that are now part of the Elsevier family,
bringing with them rich histories of their own. As the company moves
forward, our founding motto remains apt: Non Solus – Not Alone.
Ý nghĩa NON SOLUS
Non Solus: The Story Behind the Elsevier Tree
There is some debate over the meaning of the original Elzevir
printer’s mark that is still used as Elsevier’s logo today and features
an old man standing beneath a vine-entwined elm tree. It is inscribed
with the Latin term Non Solus (not alone). The mark, first introduced by
Isaac Elzevir (son of Lowys) in 1620, was featured on all Elzevir works
from that time forth.
That the Elzevir family took pride in their
mark is undisputed; what they intended it to mean is less clear.
Although most scholars agree that the elm represents the tree of
knowledge, they cannot agree on the meaning of the intertwined vine. The
Parisian librarian Adry posited in 1806 that the elm tree entwined with
the grapevine symbolized the bond between brothers Isaac and Abraham
Elzevir and that the old man, a hermit, symbolized the seclusion of
study. However, contemporary art historian Lucy Schlüter suggests more
persuasively that the old man represents a wise scholar, a philosopher –
evoking Erasmus’ image of Socrates sitting under a tree in a rural
setting delivering fruitful and inspiring lectures.
In this context the intertwined tree and vine represent a fruitful
relationship – and the story therefore carries a moral. As Erasmus said,
referring to the classic metaphor of tree and vine: "Like the vine
which, though the most distinguished of all trees, yet needs the support
of canes or stake or other trees which bear no fruit, the powerful and
the learned need the help of lesser men."
Viewed this way, the
logo represents, in classical symbolism, the symbiotic relationship
between publisher and scholar. The addition of the Non Solus inscription
reinforces the message that publishers, like the elm tree, are needed
to provide sturdy support for scholars, just as surely as scholars, the
vine, are needed to produce fruit. Publishers and scholars cannot do it
alone. They need each other. This remains as apt a representation of the
relationship between Elsevier and its authors today – neither
dependent, nor independent, but interdependent.