ALERT! Microsoft Office License Changes Require “Sign-In” at First Use in W&L Classrooms

Classroom computers in W&L spaces now have Office 365 installed to provide the most up-to-date feature set and to enable advanced Box functionality such as co-authoring)

Users who launch any Office product (i.e. Microsoft Word,  Microsoft Excel, Microsoft PowerPoint, etc.) on a classroom computer will be prompted to authenticate for their initial use. 

When launching an Office application the first time, users will encounter this challenge, and should SELECT “SIGN-IN” and proceed. Your Washington & Lee University email and password are the correct credentials to use. A Microsoft Office sign-in screen titled "Sign in to set up Office". The screen displays three icons representing benefits: using your regular email address, getting free cloud storage, and using your account to install Office on other devices. Below, there's text stating "Sign in with your work, school, or personal Microsoft account" followed by two buttons: "Sign in" (highlighted in blue) and "Create account". A red arrow points to the "Sign in" button. At the bottom are links for "I have a product key" and "What is a Microsoft account?".

After authentication in a classroom, subsequent use of Office apps should not require authentication beyond your standard login to the PC.

If you should encounter difficulties after the initial use and authentication, please contact the ITS Helpdesk at help@wlu.edu, call 540.458.4357 (HELP), or stop by the Main Level of Leyburn Library.

Why Audio Transcription Matters

pink, purple, and blue soundwave forms

Audio transcription is the process of converting audio (or video) content into written text

Between brainstorming and planning, writing and recording, editing and mixing, you’ve put in a significant amount of time and effort to create a podcast. Why would anyone want to pile on the additional work of generating a word-by-word account of that incredible episode?!?

Consider this: you’ve already put in a significant amount of time and effort — not to mention blood, sweat, and tears — to create a totally amazing podcast, right? Now, all you need are listeners! Don’t you want your podcast to be as accessible and discoverable as possible?

According to the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, 37.5 million American adults aged 18 and over report some trouble hearing. 30 million Americans aged 12 years or older has hearing loss in both ears, based on standard hearing examinations. 

Not only does audio transcription make it possible for a user who is hard of hearing to engage with your content, it can also clear up confusion caused by regional dialects or unavoidable background noise wherever a listener may be.

Having a text transcript available on your website also invites search engines like Google to crawl, and index your content, making your podcast findable to your dream audience! Who wouldn’t want more search traffic and visitors?

An audio transcript creates a better experience overall for all users. New and existing listeners can give a transcript a quick look  before committing to listening to the full podcast. It’ll also be easier for your audience to search text to find some fascinating/interesting/thought-provoking tidbit rather than try to located the snippet in the audio itself.

If we’ve sold you on the value of audio transcription, listen up, because there’s a quick and painless way to create a transcript!

Did you know the online version of Word can transcribe audio that you record directly within Word? Better yet, if you already have a .wav, .mp4, or .mp3 file, you can simply upload it to Word and have it transcribed for you? Microsoft’s AI will even identify different speakers and organize the conversation into sections that you can easily edit and ultimately insert into a Word document. Pretty nifty, right?

Check out the official Microsoft Help Guide: Transcribe your recordings.  We’ve tested it and can verify that it works great!

Happy Transcribing!

NOTE: You are limited to five hours per month for uploaded audio; there is no transcription limit for audio recorded within Word on the web. English is the only language that is currently supported. You MUST use either the latest version of Microsoft Edge or Google Chrome.

Have questions? Need help? Email the ITS Information Desk at help@wlu.edu, call 540-458-4357 (HELP), or stop by the ITS Information Desk on the Main Level of Leyburn Library.

The “Read Aloud” feature in Word: a game changer for proofreading!

Did you know that Microsoft Word can read aloud the text of documents to you? Aye! This can be super helpful if you’re tired of reading the screen or are proofreading from another document.

Using a desktop version of Word, position your cursor where you want the reading aloud to begin and click on Review > Read Aloud button. Watch below!

Click the Read Aloud button a second time and it stops. Click the button again to continue from that point on.

Pretty sweet, right?