If I've learned anything in my life, it's that you can never have too much money, Pokémon cards, or clipart. After all, when it comes to clipart, you don't want the visuals in your PowerPoint and ...
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. If you’re creating ...
In a Microsoft Office blog posted today, the software giant announced a change to the way it will help people find images to populate countless Powerpoint images and tacky Word documents. From today, ...
The execution was as workmanlike as it was sudden. “The Office.com Clip Art and image library has closed shop,” a Microsoft Office blog declared on Monday. In an ...
You can download various clip art licensed in public domain, Creative Commons. There are also many icon-like things that can be used in site creation, presentation ...
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. Except maybe ...
The Microsoft Corp. logo sits on display during the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in Washington on July 16, 2014. Microsoft quietly bid farewell to its “Clip Art” image library Tuesday, ...
The good news is that Pickit’s 1.2 billion-image library is a hell of a lot bigger than clip art’s ever was, and not nearly as grotty. Basically, the images on Pickit are uploaded to the database by ...
Microsoft just announced that it's replacing the cheesetastic images with web-searchable galleries, effectively ending clip art as we know it. This was inevitable, probably, but it also marks the end ...
Microsoft Office announced Tuesday that it's moving on from Clip Art, the image service that proved oh-so-popular in many a school paper and work presentation for years: "The Office.com Clip Art and ...