-
Content Count
14 -
Joined
-
Last visited
About Eddie Dean
-
Rank
F2Post
- Birthday 01/26/1995
Contact Methods
-
Steam
billybumbler00
Recent Profile Visitors
The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.
-
Eddie Dean started following Arm the Homeless
-
Arm the Homeless started following Eddie Dean
-
He resigned.
-
What song are you listening to RIGHT now?
Eddie Dean replied to Confusedn't's topic in Entertainment Theater
-
I'm pretty happy with my headset.
-
It shares the gcfs, which hold all of the game's base content, but if you want to have all of your custom maps and configs and whatnot, you'll have to copy the "team fortress 2" folder from steamapps\youraccountname to steamapps\youraltaccountname . Unless you know how to create a symlink, in which case, do that instead.
-
I memorize keystrokes for specific actions that I use often, so I don't even need to touch the menus to get to them. It's only when I'm looking for commands I have not memorized that I prefer the old drop down menus, as it's easier to scan down a list to find something than to page through colorful icons. And my hand is going to be moving from typing positions regardless, to get to the arrow keys to browse through the lists or to go to a mouse, and my personal preference is the mouse. Any inefficiency created by moving my hand to my mouse as compared to the arrow keys is negligible.
-
I'm guessing that brings up the categories in newer versions of word. I do prefer to use my mouse for the menus, though, so alt would be an extra keystroke simply to accomplish the same functionality that I have right off the bat in LibreOffice.
-
I honestly don't use many advanced features in my word processing, as I find them superfluous to the only thing I use word for, which is typing essays, as I type my fiction in Google Docs and notes to myself/basic coding in Notepad++. However, I do enjoy having anything that I would need organized in drop-down menus with the keyboard shortcuts written next to the action, so I can more easily memorize keyboard shortcuts for things that I need to do a lot, and find obscure functions easily by reading down a list, rather than hunting a function down through a clusterfuck of icons organized in non-traditional categories.
-
Eh, personally, I'm perfectly willing to use to nab programs, but I actually prefer LibreOffice. The lack of ribbon interface is a real boon, it's easy to set up for MLA formatting, and it has any and all features required to write a paper. What more do you need in word processing software?
-
The SPUF/SPUFPowered 2012 Saxxy Awards Project!
Eddie Dean replied to 2560x1600@120hz's topic in Digital Gaming
I would watch the shit out of that video. It'd be in the category of "so-depressing-it's-funny".