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Microsoft Clip Art Now Uses the DALL-E AI Program That Draws Anything You Ask. Melissa T. Miller. Fri, November 4, 2022 at 5:30 PM UTC. 4 min read.
Microsoft will no longer offer Clip Art. As an alternative, the company is pointing users to use Bing image search instead. Which is fine, because that’s what everyone was doing anyway.
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.
Before the days of search engines, placing images into Word documents went like this: Insert > Picture > Clip Art. Those days are long gone. Now, you can just as easily find an image of a light ...
Microsoft announced in a blog post that it is shuttering its Clip Art library in favor of Bing Images, where users can now download royalty free images to use in their projects. Screen Bean ...
Microsoft’s history with Clip Art dates back to 1996 and the launch of Word 6.0, which included a paltry 82 images in its default installation. Nonetheless, ...
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 announced that it is eliminating clip art libraries from its suite of Office productivity software, and replacing it with Bing Image search. But the iconic illustrations may live on.
Microsoft is killing off Clip Art in favor of Bing Images. Farewell, ‘90s illustrations. Farewell, ‘90s illustrations. by Tom Warren. Source Microsoft Office blog. Dec 1, 2014, 8:15 PM UTC ...
Theage.com says over the years, Clip Art grew into an expansive library, from "only 82 illustrations built into Word 6.0 in 1996 ... to more than 100,000 static and moving images housed online.".
Clip art. Microsoft has just announced that it’s killing off the last trace of clip art in its Office products, instead pointing users in need of imagery toward Bing Image Search.
Microsoft just killed Clip Art — and replaced it with Bing. Everyone was getting images off the internet anyway, Microsoft said. Andrew Griffin. Tuesday 02 December 2014 15:38 GMT.