June 21, 2008

PowerPoint guidelines at a click

Date: June 13th, 2008

Author: Susan Harkins

PowerPoint’s guides intersect the middle of a slide, resembling a gun sight, just a bit, if you ask me. You can use these guides to measure the distance between objects and to position things accurately.

Guides are easy enough to display. Just right-click the slide, choose Grid And Guidelines from the resulting context menu, check the Display Drawing Guide On Screen, and then click OK. By default, there are only two guides, but you can move them. Simply click a guide and drag it.

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Moving guides around can present a bit of a problem if you’re working with a lot of objects. Sometimes, it isn’t the guides’ position — you simply need more of them. The good news is that you can add as many guides as you need. This is one of those tips that seems simple and intuitive, especially if you use Office products a lot. Yet, I just discovered it. I can’t remember that I ever needed it before, which is generic propecia safe probably explains the lapse.

To add new guides, press Ctrl and drag a guide. Instead of dragging the existing guide to a new position, PowerPoint generates a new guide.

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This works in all versions, including the newest, PowerPoint 2007.

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May 24, 2008

How to add descriptive text to a PowerPoint slide

Date: May 19th, 2008

Author: Susan Harkins

Slides highlight or emphasize information that the presenter elaborates on during the actual presentation. After all, you can’t put everything on slides. When you want to provide additional information, but you don’t want to include it in the actual slide show, use notes. In Normal view, you can enter notes in the small section just below the slide where it says Click to add notes.
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To view all notes, choose Notes Page from the View menu (or choose Notes Page in the Presentation Views group on the View menu in PowerPoint 2007). Use the scroll bar to view individual slides and notes. You can enter and copy text in this view as well.

Although you can use these notes as handouts for the audience, many presenters use them to script their presentation. During the presentation, the presenter can see the notes, but the audience can’t. During the development stage, you can use Notes as reminders of things to add, change, or research further.

To print notes, choose Print from the File menu, select Notes Pages from the Print What control, and click OK. Doing so prints slides and notes — one page for each slide. In PowerPoint 2007, click the Office button to find the Print command.

I’ve yet to find a good way to print just notes without using another application, such as Word. PowerPoint will print just the notes, but the feature is troublesome:

  1. Choose Notes Page from the View menu.
  2. Select a slide and choose Notes Layout from the Format menu.
  3. In the resulting Notes Layout dialog box, deselect everything but Body and click OK.

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PowerPoint will print a page for each slide and that page will contain viagra women only the note text. It’s awkward at best because PowerPoint also prints a page for slides with no notes — in other words, you get a blank sheet of paper with a page number in the bottom right corner. In addition, you must apply the format to every slide. Removing the slide placeholder from the Notes Page Master doesn’t do the trick. However, you can delete the page number by displaying the Page Master and deleting the default footer placeholder. At least that way, you can reuse the paper.

If you don’t want a single page per slide, you can send notes to Word, but you’ll have to tweak the content once it’s there. From the File menu, choose Send To, select Microsoft Office Word, then choose one of the many options, and click OK. In PowerPoint 2007, click the Office button, choose Publish, and select Create Handouts In Microsoft Office Word.

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In Word, you’ll have to delete the slide content (text and graphics) or links and then format the notes to suit your needs. Publishing the notes below the slides seems to reduce the amount of tweaking in Word.

Printing just the notes in a reasonable format seems like such a useful feature that, for the life of me, I don’t understand why PowerPoint can’t do it.

It’s worth mentioning that notes aren’t the same as comments. A comment appears in a yellow box inside a slide. Most often, other people reviewing your presentation communicate their ideas, additions, mistakes, and so on, via comments, and you eventually delete them. In contrast, notes remain with the presentation as reference.

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May 21, 2008

Just Give It a Nudge

When working in MS PowerPoint, are you frequently frustrated when you try to move objects just a wee little bit?

I mean, you're only trying to nudge the text box or graphic a small amount, but every time you try to drag and drop it with the mouse, it just goes too far.

A solution for that predicament certainly would come in handy, wouldn't it?!

Fortunately, I've got one that's easy to use and remember!

First, select the object to be moved. (If it's a text box, be sure you have just the text box itself selected and make sure the cursor isn't inside the text box for editing).

Ready to move? Good! It goes quick, so pay attention.

Simply tap an arrow key to move the selected object just a nudge in any of the four directions.

Also, as a bonus, I found that holding down the Ctrl key while using an arrow key makes the nudge even smaller.

That's all there is to it!

With the object selected, one press of an arrow key moves it just the tiniest amount. Talk about fine tuning!

Have a large distance to cover?

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Don't worry! You can use this tip for that too.

Instead of a quick tap, hold down the arrow key. You'll find that your object zips around the slide as though it had on running shoes!

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May 7, 2008

How to trim down the size of your PowerPoint presentation

Date: April 14th, 2008

Author: Susan Harkins

PowerPoint presentation files can grow quickly. Graphics files, music, and all those custom viagra newsletter instructions really add up. There are a few things you can do to reduce the file’s size:

  • Reduce all graphics files to 96 dpi if you don’t need to print them directly from the presentation. For screen viewing, 96 dpi is the best you can get. To include files with a higher resolution is a waste.
  • Bitmap (.bmp) files are usually larger than other formats. If you’re using bitmap files, try converting them to .jpeg or .png. Even .gif is better than .bmp, but not quite as efficient as .jpeg and .png.
  • If the file suddenly grows in size for no apparent reason, save the presentation using Save As and give it a new name. This simple trick can reduce the file’s size up to 50%, but it won’t always work. This trick works with normal bloat.
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April 23, 2008

PowerPoint 2003 Add-in: Producer for PowerPoint 2003 (exe)

Overview: Use Microsoft Producer 2003 for Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2003 to capture and synchronize audio, video, slides, and images, then preview and publish a rich media presentation virtually anywhere for viewing in a Web browser. Microsoft Producer 2003 for PowerPoint 2003 is the next release of this very popular add-in for PowerPoint 2003 and PowerPoint 2002. Producer 2003 provides users with many powerful new features that make it easier to synchronize audio, video, slides, and images to create engaging and effective rich-media presentations. Producer 2003 gives content and media professionals, as well as everyday PowerPoint users a host of new content authoring features. This version is the first release on CNET Download.com.

Download here

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