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PowerPoint Tips and Tricks |
Using Different Backgrounds
within one Presentation
Although you only have two background
designs automatically supplied with the Masters (counting both the Slide
Master and the Title Master), you can have any design you want on any slide.
From the Format menu, select Background. Check the box that
says "omit background items" and this will make the slide ignore the Slide
Master's design. You are now free to add whatever design you want to this
slide. If you want to do this to many slides at once, go to the Slide Sorter,
select the slides, and then use the Format menu command. Remember using
this process instead of doing it once on the Master, may increase the file
size dramatically.
Using More than One Guide
If you like using guides,
but wish there were more, you can create additional Guides by simply holding
down the CTRL key while dragging on an existing Guide. This will
create a new guide. To get rid of guides, just drag them off the edge of
the slide.
Creating Pages with
Slides and Descriptive Text
If you want to create
printable pages that have notes or descriptive text associated each slide,
PowerPoint has a feature designed to do just this called Notes Pages, or
Speaker's Notes (depending on which version you're using). To view the
Notes page for any slide, go to the View menu and select Notes
Pages. You will see an image of your slide there, and a placeholder
for adding your script, notes, or any other text you wish. You can cut-and-paste
text from Word here if you like. To print these pages, bring up the Print
dialog, and at the bottom of the dialog where it says "Print What:", select
Notes Pages.These pages were originally designed to be used as audience
hand outs.To return to the normal view, click the Slide View button
in the lower right corner.
Building Presentations
for Distribution to Others
If you're making a
PowerPoint presentation that you intend to distribute to lots of different
people, here are some important things to watch out for that will cause
problems:
1. Stick with the fonts
that come installed with Windows; Fancy fonts that appear on your machine
will cause problems if everyone else doesn't have them.
2. Avoid embedding
sounds and videos: these will not go from Mac to Windows gracefully, and
you have to be very careful about how you insert the files in order to
get them to "travel" properly. See the FAQ section for more information
on this.
3. Design the presentation
on the lowest version that you think might be in use. For example, if you
want the presentation to be able to be viewed by Mac users (who may not
have upgraded to the latest version), you will want to design your presentation
in PowerPoint 4.0. If you don't have PowerPoint 4, then you'll want to
save your presentation in the lowest format you think people will have.
For cross-platform distribution, 4.0 is still your safest bet; for Windows-only
distribution, save to PowerPoint 95. When you down-rev save, be prepared
for some visual changes in your file--the previous version may not support
some of the features you've put in, so be sure to sanity check your file
on several different machines and versions BEFORE you distribute it!
