> 1. The images I'm linking to in my presentation are all PSD images with no
> background so they shouldn't appear inside a white box. About half the
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> any kind, even when I disable all the transitions. Ready to shoot myself
> here.
>> 1. The images I'm linking to in my presentation are all PSD images with no
>> background so they shouldn't appear inside a white box. About half the
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>
> -Mark
When I use transparent .gifs instead of psd files, the white or highlighted
areas of the images become transparent and the background shows through
during the animation. The images are smaller, but it also does NOT seem to
effect the smoothness of the playback, which is still jumpy.
Also, when Itry to "Make Movie" or optimize the presentation, PowerPoint
crashes. No matter what I do, it will not save the presentation as a .mov.
J
mmmmark - 27 Mar 2006 16:18 GMT
>>> 1. The images I'm linking to in my presentation are all PSD images with
>>> no
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> crashes. No matter what I do, it will not save the presentation as a .mov.
> J
If you work with a transparent pasteboard in Photoshop, anything with color
will not be transparent when converting to .gif if you are using the proper
matte. Do a "save for web" which gives you some added flexibility. This
isn't the primary problem, obviously though.
It sounds like your quicktime version isn't palying nice. Do you still have
6 or do you have version 7? Is it fullly up to date--7.0.4? Is office
fully updated to 11.2.3?
Just a thought.
-Mark
John R. Johnson - 27 Mar 2006 21:58 GMT
>>>> 1. The images I'm linking to in my presentation are all PSD images with
>>>> no
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>
> -Mark
I tried creating a new presentation using a couple of small GIF images, but
the playback was still very jumpy, with many of the animations skipping. So
the images are not the problem. They are also not what is causing PowerPoint
to crash whenever I try to "Make Movie." I
I have PowerPoint 11.0 on this Mac G4. I also have QuickTime 7.0.4 installed
and have no trouble playing movies from other sources.
I'm also using a music track on this presentation, which starts at the first
slide. The playback of the sound is smooth and uninterrupted until the 4
slide, when it begins to stop and start erratically.
John
mmmmark - 27 Mar 2006 23:28 GMT
>>>>> 1. The images I'm linking to in my presentation are all PSD images
>>>>> with
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>
> John
Is Powerpoint fully updated? What size music files are you using? How big
are the .PSD files you are using? How much RAM do you have?
I might be that Powerpoint starts using virtual memory right at the
slow-down point.
Just thinking out loud! :-)
-Mark
John R. Johnson - 28 Mar 2006 16:39 GMT
>>>>>> 1. The images I'm linking to in my presentation are all PSD images
>>>>>> with
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>
> -Mark
As I said, I double checked the whole memory issue by creating a new
presentation using very small image files-- GIFs, with no music track. I
still got the jumpy playback. I did update to 11.2.3, but that hasn't
helped, either. One thing the smaller file version did help with was the
problem I had when trying to "Make Movie". PowerPoint didn't crash, as it
had with the larger file, and I was able to create a mov.
Let me ask some basic PPT questions here:
Are there basic PPT rules about size and resolution of the image files you
can use?
Is it better to "Insert" a background music track on the Master Slide, or
can it work just as well when it's inserted into the slide presentation?
What about the actual dimensions of the slide show's screen size? What is
the idea size for that?
Can you give me a quick lesson here on how to insert a music track on a
Master Slide, when the show had no master slide to begin with?