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You’d better enjoy Microsoft’s cheesy Office Clip Art catalog while you can, because it may be going away in favor of Bing. According to a Microsoft support page, the company is retiring its ...
Microsoft Office users looking for exactly the right piece of clip art to accent their presentation or document can now turn straight to the internet from their work, thanks to a new Bing-powered ...
If you can’t seem to use Microsoft Office’s online clip art, you may be using the wrong browser.
The company revealed that their Office Clip Art website has been shut down, but Office users can now access similar images from Microsoft's Bing search engine.
It's the end of a badly-illustrated era. Microsoft has put Office Clip Art out to pasture, replacing the repository of cheesy business photos, creepy characters, and outdated tech with a new Bing ...
Microsoft today announced Clip Art is getting a new source for its images: Bing. The Office.com image library that powered the service in Microsoft Office has been killed off.
Microsoft quietly bid farewell to its “Clip Art” image library Tuesday, acknowledging that Word or PowerPoint users can find generic images of bunnies, money bags or cherry bombs through ...
That's because Microsoft has retired its dated clip art gallery and is instead using Bing to supply images within Office documents.
Microsoft’s Clip Art has long been a staple of using office products, but in today’s world, most people would rather just run a quick image search online.
Goodbye, 90s clip art, Microsoft has deleted ye, replaced by Bing’s Image search instead. Uh-oh, if you were a fan of Microsoft’s Office clip art, replete with those funny drawings and images ...
Though there's no built-in fire animation for text in PowerPoint, you can use clip art to simulate the effect. Microsoft Office PowerPoint supports the use of animated picture files in the GIF ...