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  2. 80 of the Most Useful Excel Shortcuts - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/80-most-useful-excel...

    These 11 keyboard shortcuts make web browsing ten times easier.. Selecting cells, rows, columns, etc. When navigating through cells, rows, and columns the Excel shortcut keys are the same, no ...

  3. Table of keyboard shortcuts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Table_of_keyboard_shortcuts

    KDE Fundamentals: Common Keyboard Shortcuts; KDE Community Wiki: KDE Visual Design Group/HIG/Keyboard Shortcuts; Office Suites. Apache OpenOffice or LibreOffice. OpenOffice.org and LibreOffice keyboard shortcuts; Web Browsers. Chrome or Chromium: Google Chrome keyboard shortcuts; Firefox: Firefox browser keyboard shortcuts; Opera: Opera browser ...

  4. Help:Keyboard shortcuts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Keyboard_shortcuts

    On Wikipedia, access keys allow you to do a lot more—protect a page, show page history, publish your changes, show preview text, and so on. See the next section for the full list. Most web browsers require holding down one or two modifier keys to use an access key.

  5. Wikipedia:Bypass your cache - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Bypass_your_cache

    To speed things up and conserve communications bandwidth, browsers attempt to keep local copies of pages, images, and other content you've visited, so that it need not be downloaded again later. Occasionally this caching scheme goes awry (e.g. the browser insists on showing out-of-date content) making it necessary to bypass the cache, thus ...

  6. Google Chrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Chrome

    Most of Chrome's source code comes from Google's free and open-source software project Chromium, but Chrome is licensed as proprietary freeware. [12] WebKit was the original rendering engine , but Google eventually forked it to create the Blink engine; [ 15 ] all Chrome variants except iOS used Blink as of 2017.

  7. Wikipedia:Link rot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Link_rot

    Link rot is a significant danger to Wikipedia because of the reliability policy and source citation guideline. In general, do not delete cited information solely because the URL to the source does not work any longer. Tools, procedures, and processes are available as outlined in this document.

  8. Links (web browser) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Links_(web_browser)

    Hacked Links is another version of the Links browser which has merged some of Elinks' features into Links 2. Andrey Mirtchovski has ported it to Plan 9 from Bell Labs. It is considered a good browser on that operating system, though some users have complained about its inability to cut and paste with the Plan 9 snarf buffer. [citation needed]

  9. Link rot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Link_rot

    Link rot (also called link death, link breaking, or reference rot) is the phenomenon of hyperlinks tending over time to cease to point to their originally targeted file, web page, or server due to that resource being relocated to a new address or becoming permanently unavailable.