Thoughts and impressions of happenings in the world of PowerPoint and presentations, continuously updated since 2003.
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PowerPoint and Presenting Notes
PowerPoint and Presenting Glossary
In a previous tutorial, you have learned how you can edit points (vertexes) of a selected shape to alter its structure. These vertexes let you control how a shape looks — but sometimes you might find it difficult to edit a certain segment in a shape because there are no vertexes (points) available to manipulate — or maybe there are far too many points! PowerPoint provides a simple solution for this problem — you can add and delete vertexes from a shape. In PowerPoint terminology, the terms vertex and point are often used interchangeably.
Learn how to add or delete points (vertexes) of a shape in PowerPoint 2011 for Mac.
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PowerPoint 2011
Tagged as: Office for Mac, PowerPoint 2011, Shapes, Tutorials
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What is it that attracts an audience within any presentation? Are they the slides? Or is it the speaker? Or is there something else that is the sum of all parts: the audience themselves, the speaker, and the slides? We may all have been speakers at one occasion or another but we have also been part of an audience — and do all successful presentations have a quality about them that we remember long after the presenation was over? If you think carefully about all successful presentations that linger in your thoughts, then there has to be a common thread that strings through all of them — and that has to be the charisma of the speaker!
Read this issue of Indezine News.
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Ezine
Tagged as: Ezine, Indezine, News, PowerPoint
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Dynamic Content transitions are new transition effects in PowerPoint 2010 (these also work in PowerPoint 2011 for Mac). When these transitions are applied to your slide, the actual transition occurs on all areas of the slide except the backgrounds. This makes your content move independently on and off the screen. PowerPoint 2010 provides seven different transition effects within the Dynamic Content category — do experiment with these options for direction and timing to create some great looking presentations.
Learn about Dynamic Content transitions in PowerPoint 2010 for Windows.
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PowerPoint 2010
Tagged as: PowerPoint 2010, Transitions, Tutorials
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Do you want to be more influential in your meetings and presentations? Consider doing these behaviors so that you are on top of the content as well as your presenting style.
Image: Jump Story
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Guest Posts
Tagged as: Claudyne Wilder, Delivery, Guest Post, PowerPoint, Presentation Skills
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These Valentine mobiles are suspended from a rope, and are freely moving pendulum-like in the air with random speeds and directions. All the heart mobiles you see are Theme aware so that their fills change when you apply a new Theme. In addition, we used animation sparingly, yet effectively to create this effect – the entire slide uses just the Spin animation and nothing else! And while this entire animated slide was created in PowerPoint 2010, it should work just fine in PowerPoint 2007 for Windows and PowerPoint 2008/2011 for Mac. All animations are set to repeat indefinitely so that the hearts keep moving until you navigate to the next slide.
Download and use this slide in your presentation.
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Presentation Bank
Tagged as: Animation, PowerPoint, Presentation Samples
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