Thoughts and impressions of happenings in the world of PowerPoint and presentations, continuously updated since 2003.
See Also:
PowerPoint and Presenting Notes
PowerPoint and Presenting Glossary
TechSmith’s Camtasia Studio product may be branded as a screen recording program, but that description doesn’t do it much justice, since we consider it to be the Swiss Army Knife of video capture, editing, and sharing. At Indezine, we have been users of Camtasia Studio for a long time, and any new release of this product is an opportunity for us to play with the new features.
Read our review of Techsmith Camtasia Studio 6.
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Reviews
Tagged as: Camtasia, Movies, PowerPoint, Review, Techsmith
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Creating a quiz in PowerPoint normally entails one of two approaches: the first is to learn VBA and code a quiz with responses, and the second is to keep things simple and create a basic quiz. Also, some users tend to use Flash based products like Quizmaker or YawnBuster for the quizzes, thus ending up with an embedded Flash quiz on their PowerPoint slides.
While all these approaches get the task done, a specialized product like Atrixware’s PowerPoint Quizmaker can help create quizzes that look like they were created in PowerPoint without having to spend long hours creating them.
Read the Indezine review of PowerPoint Quizmaker 2009.
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Reviews
Tagged as: Add-in, PowerPoint, Review
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Mark Schwartz is the executive vice president for sales and marketing at Articulate. In this role, he has worldwide sales responsibility for Articulate leading the direct sales and channel management teams as well as all product marketing activities. Prior to joining Articulate, Mark spent 20 years in sales and sales management roles with IBM and Dell.
In this discussion, Mark discusses the new Articulate Presenter ’09 product.
Geetesh: Articulate Presenter is already such a full-featured program. What did you add to version ’09 to make it better?
Mark: We’re really proud of the great job our engineering team did in improving upon Articulate Presenter. I’ve had an opportunity to demonstrate Presenter ’09 at several trade shows already. The feedback that I’ve received has been extremely positive. The features that seem to receive the most acclaim include: the ability to add annotations to the course, preview publish options, improved image fidelity, branching support, notes formatting, mobile support, and PowerPoint 2007 ribbon interface and new feature support (such as SmartArt).
Geetesh: Mark, tell us more about the support infrastructure in place for Articulate Presenter and your other products.
Mark: According to our own and independent third-party research, Articulate continues to receive very high marks in support. We recently won a Top 10 Best Web Support Site for the second year in a row. We offer free web-based support, and we work hard at providing a comprehensive self-service support site that solves most customer problems almost instantaneously. Should a customer need to open a case, we are able to respond to over 90% of our cases within an hour.
Our community forums, which are a critical element of our support offerings, now have over 32,000 active members. We actively monitor and respond to customer threads, and our customer base also does a great job responding to other customers in need. We truly have a very helpful and amazingly intelligent user community. I believe this is paramount to our success.
Our support site includes over 90 web-based tutorials to get customers up to speed on our products. Should customers desire customized training from us, we offer web-based and instructor-led training sessions.
We offer an enhanced, fee-based support option–the Platinum Membership Plan (PMP), which provides a free Software Developers Kit, chat support, and pre-paid, discounted version upgrades.
Finally, we offer fee-based incident phone support that includes a web conference component where we can take over the user’s computer if that would prove beneficial and if we are granted access.
You May Also Like: Articulate Presenter ’09: The Indezine Review.
The views and opinions expressed in this blog post or content are those of the authors or the interviewees and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any other agency, organization, employer, or company.
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Interviews
Tagged as: Articulate, eLearning, Interviews, Mark Schwartz, PowerPoint
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If your presentation uses the Formatting toolbar to add shadows to text, you’ll find that it shows fine when played in PowerPoint 2007. However, any shadows that you add through the Drawing toolbar in PowerPoint 2003 or earlier end up looking horrible in PowerPoint 2007. The results work out worse when the text is animated. In that case, the text animates, but the shadow doesn’t!
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PowerPoint 2007
Tagged as: PowerPoint, PowerPoint 2007, Version Hell
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Continuing with my Office Moves Browser-wards post, more details have started emerging.
Sci-Tech Today reports that “the apps will be made available at the end of next year, when the new Office 14 is released. A technology preview is being planned for the end of this year.”
The National Business Review has many screenshots including one that shows the PowerPoint version of the web incarnation—their report adds: “Pushing the boundaries still further, Microsoft says Office 14 Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote files will also be able to be viewed, and edited, on a smart phone’s web browser—and again, you won’t necessarily have to own a Windows Mobile handset.”
vnunet adds that, “Customers tell us they want to be able to share information and collaborate with others seamlessly across the PC, phones and the web,” said Takeshi Numoto, general manager for the Office client. Speaking at the company’s Professional Developers Conference (PDC) in Los Angeles, Numoto demonstrated how the web applications allow two people to open and edit the same document stored in Office Live Workspace, with any changes synchronised between the two copies almost instantly.”
The views and opinions expressed in this blog post or content are those of the authors or the interviewees and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any other agency, organization, employer, or company.
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Microsoft Office
Tagged as: Microsoft Office, Office for the Web, PowerPoint for the Web
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Microsoft and the Office logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and/or other countries.