PowerPoint and Presenting Stuff - Page 578 of 1225


PowerPoint and Presenting Stuff

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

« Older EntriesNewer Entries »



Wednesday, August 13, 2014, posted by Geetesh Bajaj at 9:45 am

An interactive PowerPoint presentation always interests audiences since it gets them involved actively navigating the slides. However, the audiences for whom these interactive slides are intended must be aware that some interactivity has been included so that they can click a slide object to cause an action to happen. With trigger animations, you click on a PowerPoint shape (or even an Action Button or any other slide object) to cause an audio or video clip on the same slide to play, pause, resume, or even stop.

Add Trigger Animations for Media Actions in PowerPoint 2013 for Windows

Add Trigger Animations for Media Actions in PowerPoint 2013 for Windows

Learn to add trigger animations for audio and video actions in PowerPoint 2013 for Windows.

Filed Under: PowerPoint 2013
Tagged as: , , ,

Comments Off on Add Trigger Animations for Media Actions in PowerPoint 2013 for Windows


Wednesday, August 13, 2014, posted by Geetesh Bajaj at 9:30 am

Sometime the original look of the inserted video may not work well with the color palette of your presentation. You could play around with the brightness and contract for an inserted video by using the Corrections option. Additionally, you can also completely recolor your inserted video — so you can make your full color video appear as a grayscale video, or even like a duotoned video such as blue and grayscale — or any of the other Recolor options.

Learn about the Recolor options for videos in PowerPoint 2013 for Windows.

Filed Under: PowerPoint 2013
Tagged as: , ,

Comments Off on Learn PowerPoint 2013 for Windows: Video Recolor Options


Wednesday, August 13, 2014, posted by Geetesh Bajaj at 4:00 am

Richard Michaels

Richard Michaels
Richard Michaels is an expert at applying critical thinking to address large-scale business challenges and has been responsible for the implementation of training initiatives for organizations including: Bristol-Myers Squibb, IBM, Novartis, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Schering-Plough, Sanofi-Aventis, FDA, U.S. Army Training Command, and the Singapore Institute of Management.

In addition to expertise in instructional design, writing and education, Richard is also an expert software developer and a Microsoft Office for the Mac MVP.

In this conversation, Richard discusses George, his add-in for PowerPoint.

Geetesh: Tell us more about George, and what motivated you to create this add-in.

Richard: My motivation for writing George came from attending seminars and either receiving no handout upon which to take notes or receiving one that was so poorly done that it detracted from an otherwise very good presentation. I came to conclude that time and skill are the two primary factors that prevent presenters from making worthwhile handouts based on their PowerPoint slides. I also concluded that something could be done to improve the situation.

George

George
All presenters labor over their presentations. They try to find the right design, content sequence and delivery method that will make their message heard and this of course takes time… so much so that often they run out of time to produce a “leave behind piece” that is on a par with the quality of their presentation overall.

Top presenters know well that details matter and in the end, in addition to the relevancy of the delivered content, their audience judges them based on how well they dressed, spoke, coordinated, emphasized and enriched their message by the media they used. I believe presenters consciously rationalize their decision of what to “handout” based on those factors and often conclude that since they are short on time and maybe even skill with Word, they will just concentrate on what they do best… the verbal delivery of their message and creating the supportive PowerPoint slides.

Admittedly making a really good handout document, especially one with a level of quality that compliments and does not detract from a great presentation, is a lot of work. However, I believe it is a worthwhile effort because a handout has the potential for being the tangible “reminder” component that facilitates future knowledge gain, understanding, and action.

PowerPoint does provide a mechanism to produce Word documents from the slides but unfortunately its output choices are limited and still requires a high level of skill with many advanced Word functions. To produce a “professional” looking final product including a cover page, acknowledgements page, table-of-contents, as well as properly formatted and aligned headers, footers, slide images, notes and capture area content, requires a solid understanding and competency with using Microsoft Word. Not many presenters or even people who produce great PowerPoint slides are also experts at creating proper Word documents.

And then finally for the time constrained presenter and PowerPoint presentation author, who also happens to be an expert level user of Word, there is the following dilemma when thinking about the work involved with making a “professional” looking handout that causes even them to take pause… What happens when the content of one slide has to change or a slide has to be sequenced in the slide deck? All that work on the handout document has to be redone!


How to make a Handout from a PPT file with george!.
How to make a Handout from a PPT file with george!


Geetesh: For anyone who wants to create handouts for the PowerPoint slides, how does George do it better than PowerPoint’s own options?

Richard: I can think of 10 good reasons why George is a better solution…

  1. George provides 24 layout options across 3 page orientations. That’s 72 different document styles. PowerPoint provides their standard 7 layouts in one page orientation.
  2. George automatically creates a Cover Page, Acknowledgement Page, Table of Contents, establishes and sets all Headers and Footers, automatically inserts the appropriate Heading 1 (Topic) and Heading 2 (Subtopic) labeled Paragraphs in the document. PowerPoint provides none of that by itself.x
  3. George automatically personalizes the finished document with your Document Title, Logo, and Copyright. PowerPoint provides none of that by itself.
  4. George is fast! If you have to recreate the document, it’s done in minutes not by hours of copy and pasting, or inserting of topic and subtopic text, cover page, logo, etc.
  5. George allows you to control the PPI quality of inserted images, which also allows you to control file size better.
  6. George allows you to insert new pictures into your PowerPoint slide file in 8 different layouts and to do them all at once, not one at a time.
  7. George extracts into other Word documents, copies of the slides or elements of the slides such as Text, Notes, Charts, Tables, SmartArt, Pictures, and Video Poster. The extract can be from “All” or “Selective” slides.
  8. George creates picture files from the Slides, Charts, Tables, SmartArt or embedded Pictures. Picture file creation can be from “All” or “Selective” slides and you control the format of the outputted image.
  9. George converts linked images in “All” or “Selective” to embedded images or linked & saved image types.
  10. George extracts text from the slides (“All” or “Selective”) placing it into a Word document, while maintaining the text’s original formatting. This is a very handy feature for translation or when text changes need to be made to the slides and still maintain the text formatting

Filed Under: Interviews
Tagged as: , ,

Comments Off on George for PowerPoint: Conversation with Richard Michaels


Tuesday, August 12, 2014, posted by Geetesh Bajaj at 9:30 am

A Video Action in PowerPoint is something that causes an event for any inserted movie/video clip — these are simple events such as Play, Pause, Resume, and Stop. Although PowerPoint classifies Movie Actions as an animation type, these are not strictly animations. However, since Movie Actions can be accessed through the Add Animation gallery, we have included this tutorial in our Animations section. Once you add these Media Actions to your video clips, PowerPoint will allow you to make these Actions interact with other animations, including Triggers.

Media Actions for Video in PowerPoint 2013 for Windows

Media Actions for Video in PowerPoint 2013 for Windows

Learn how you can create Media Actions for video clips in PowerPoint 2013 for Windows.

Filed Under: PowerPoint 2013
Tagged as: , , ,

Comments Off on Media Actions for Video in PowerPoint 2013 for Windows


Tuesday, August 12, 2014, posted by Geetesh Bajaj at 9:30 am

Sometimes when you insert a video clip on your slide within PowerPoint 2013, it may appear too dark or light — similar to what you might have seen on your television, especially a new television where you have to make a few adjustments to get the picture just right. These adjustments can be made to any of the video clips you insert within your PowerPoint slides. These kind of adjustments may be not only necessary for the appearance of the video clips on your computer, but also for how they show when projected onto a screen or even on a connected TV.

Learn PowerPoint 2013 for Windows: Video Correction Adjustments

Learn PowerPoint 2013 for Windows: Video Correction Adjustments

Learn about the Correction adjustment options for videos in PowerPoint 2013 for Windows.

Filed Under: PowerPoint 2013
Tagged as: , ,

Comments Off on Learn PowerPoint 2013 for Windows: Video Correction Adjustments


« Older Entries « » Newer Entries »





Microsoft and the Office logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and/or other countries.

Plagiarism will be detected by Copyscape

© 2000-2026, Geetesh Bajaj - All rights reserved.

since November 02, 2000