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rondhuff@officeformac.com - 29 Apr 2008 02:38 GMT Version: 2008 Operating System: Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard) Processor: intel
I recently bought a Mac and installed Office 2008. I was using a laptop with Windows XP and Powerpoint 2007 to create presentations with background music. On the Windows machine, I inserted a m3u playlist into the first slide and then set which slide I wanted the background music to end. I've tried to do that in Powerpoint for Mac but can't find any way to insert a playlist. Is there any way to do this on the Mac?
Jim Gordon MVP - 29 Apr 2008 04:54 GMT > Version: 2008 > Operating System: Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard) > Processor: intel > > I recently bought a Mac and installed Office 2008. I was using a laptop with Windows XP and Powerpoint 2007 to create presentations with background music. On the Windows machine, I inserted a m3u playlist into the first slide and then set which slide I wanted the background music to end. I've tried to do that in Powerpoint for Mac but can't find any way to insert a playlist. Is there any way to do this on the Mac? Hi,
This question gets asked almost every day, so there's a nice explanation on this web page: Sounds stop playing when you move onto the next slide, but you want them to play across multiple slides or even for the entire presentation.
http://pptfaq.com/FAQ00047.htm
-Jim
 Signature Jim Gordon Mac MVP
MVPs are independent experts who are not affiliated with Microsoft. http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
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rondhuff@officeformac.com - 29 Apr 2008 14:57 GMT > > Version: 2008 > > Operating System: Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard) [quoted text clipped - 21 lines] > Visit my blog > <http://blog.360.yahoo.com/blog-i7JMeio7cqvhotIUwCzaJWq9> Thanks Jim for your help. I may be missing something but I'm not sure the article you referenced helps me. I may have not described what I'm trying to do very well. I have a presentation that I have been given using Powerpoint 2003 & 2007. The presentation has approximately 100 slides. I start playing the presentation 15 minutes before the start time of meeting. I have the first 30 slides set up to advance automatically at 30 sec intervals. Each of these slides have group announcements, etc. and are basically just filler while the group is coming in. While the slides are playing, Powerpoint is also playing background music. It usually takes 4 songs to fill up the 15 minute time frame. I was inserting a m3u playlist containing the 4 songs into the first slide and then under Custom Animations, setting the sound to stop after the 30th slide was done. This worked great in Powerpoint 2003 & 2007, but there seems to be no method to play multiple songs over a specific number of multiple slides in Powerpoint for Mac. Thanks again for your help.
Steve Rindsberg - 29 Apr 2008 20:05 GMT > Thanks Jim for your help. I may be missing something but I'm not sure the article you referenced helps me. I may have not described what I'm trying to do very well. I have a presentation that I have been given using Powerpoint 2003 & 2007. The presentation has approximately 100 slides. I start playing the presentation 15 minutes before the start time of meeting. I have the first 30 slides set up to advance automatically at 30 sec intervals. Each of these slides have group announcements, etc. and are basically just filler while the group is coming in. While the slides are playing, Powerpoint is also playing background music. It usually takes 4 songs to fill up the 15 minute time frame. I was inserting a m3u playlist containing the 4 songs into the first slide and then under Custom Animations, setting the sound to stop after the 30th slide was done. This worked great in Powerpoint 2003 & 2007, but there seems to be no method to play multiple songs over a specific number of multiple slides in Powerpoint for Mac. Thanks again for your help. FWIW, while PPT2003 allows me to insert m3u files on one of my PCs, it won't play them. Actually, it doesn't play media files at all ... it passese them off to the resident system software (on Windows, Windows Media Player or the older MCI media player) to do the work.
On Mac, I believe PPT would call on QuickTime to do the same job. Can you open this same m3u file in Quicktime? Does it work there?
If not, I doubt it'd work in PPT on Mac either.
================================================ Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com PPTools: www.pptools.com ================================================
rondhuff@officeformac.com - 02 May 2008 03:34 GMT > > Thanks Jim for your help. I may be missing something but I'm not sure the article you referenced helps me. I may have not described what I'm trying to do very well. I have a presentation that I have been given using Powerpoint 2003 & 2007. The presentation has approximately 100 slides. I start playing the presentation 15 minutes before the start time of meeting. I have the first 30 slides set up to advance automatically at 30 sec intervals. Each of these slides have group announcements, etc. and are basically just filler while the group is coming in. While the slides are playing, Powerpoint is also playing background music. It usually takes 4 songs to fill up the 15 minute time frame. I was inserting a m3u playlist containing the 4 songs into the first slide and then under Custom Animations, setting the sound to stop after the 30th slide was done. This worked great in Powerpoint 2003 & 2007, but there seems to be no method to play multiple songs over a specific number of multiple slides in Powerpoint for > Mac. Thanks again for your help. [quoted text clipped - 12 lines] > > Steve, thanks for the help. I'm not sure why your PPT2003 wouldn't play the m3u playlist. I do our church service using Powerpoint and have been using the m3u playlist method to play background music for quite some time. I was hoping to do something similar with Powerpoint Mac but I'm starting to think that it's just not possible. You are right though, I tried having Quicktime play the m3u playlist and it won't, but even if Quicktime would have, PPT Mac won't let me insert any format of playlist, that I know of. I exported a playlist from iTunes into txt and xml format and couldn't insert either into the PPT Mac slide. I would probably have to just insert mp3's and adjust the duration of the automatic advance slides to coincide with the song length. It will probably just be easier to stick with Windows and PPT2007. So far my experience with my first Mac has been disappointing to say the least. There's been several issues with different software packages where I can't do what I used to do on my 3 year old Windows laptop or applications where my new Mac is much, much slower than my old laptop. I've got almost 25 years experience on PC's and am by no means a novice. I'm still hoping my Mac experience will improve, but so far it seems like there's more hype to Macs than substance. Steve Rindsberg - 02 May 2008 04:50 GMT > > > Thanks Jim for your help. I may be missing something but I'm not sure the article you referenced helps me. I may have not described what I'm trying to do very well. I have a presentation that I have been given using Powerpoint 2003 & 2007. The presentation has approximately 100 slides. I start playing the presentation 15 minutes before the start time of meeting. I have the first 30 slides set up to advance automatically at 30 sec intervals. Each of these slides have group announcements, etc. and are basically just filler while the group is coming in. While the slides are playing, Powerpoint is also playing background music. It usually takes 4 songs to fill up the 15 minute time frame. I was inserting a m3u playlist containing the 4 songs into the first slide and then under Custom Animations, setting the sound to stop after the 30th slide was done. This worked great in Powerpoint 2003 & 2007, but there seems to be no method to play multiple songs over a specific number of multiple slides in Powerpoint for
> > Mac. Thanks again for your help. > > > > FWIW, while PPT2003 allows me to insert m3u files on one of my PCs, it won't play them. Actually, it doesn't play media files at all ... it passese them off to the resident system software (on Windows, Windows Media Player or the older MCI media player) to do the work.
> > On Mac, I believe PPT would call on QuickTime to do the same job. Can you open this same m3u file in Quicktime? Does it work there? > > [quoted text clipped - 7 lines] > > > > Steve, thanks for the help. I'm not sure why your PPT2003 wouldn't play the m3u playlist. I may not have the most updated versions of WMP and [whatever_else_it_takes]. I tend to be ... well, "luddite" is one of the nicer things my friends call me. ;-)
> I do our church service using Powerpoint and have been using the m3u playlist method to play background music for quite some time. I was hoping to do something similar with Powerpoint Mac but I'm starting to think that it's just not possible. You are right though, I tried having Quicktime play the m3u playlist and it won't, but even if Quicktime would have, PPT Mac won't let me insert any format of playlist, that I know of. I exported a playlist from iTunes into txt and xml format and couldn't insert either into the PPT Mac slide. I would probably have to just insert mp3's and adjust the duration of the automatic advance slides to coincide with the song length.
Would it help to use an audio editor and combine the mp3s into one file, though? Audacity is quite capable and free, in case you don't have such a critter already.
>>It will probably just be easier to stick with Windows and PPT2007. So far my experience with my first Mac has been disappointing to say the least. There's been several issues with different software packages where I can't do what I used to do on my 3 year old Windows laptop or applications where my new Mac is much, much slower than my old laptop. I've got almost 25 years experience on PC's and am by no means a novice. I'm still hoping my Mac experience will improve, but so far it seems like there's more hype to Macs than substance.
Oh, I wouldn't thump the Mac in general over what PPT will or won't do on it. Not here, anyway. <g>
================================================ Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com PPTools: www.pptools.com ================================================
Jeff Chapman - 02 May 2008 12:12 GMT > Oh, I wouldn't thump the Mac in general over what PPT will or won't do on it. > Not here, anyway. <g> Steve, you're right - Mac is Mac, PowerPoint for Mac is PowerPoint for Mac.
For whatever convoluted reasons, the Mac Office developers decided to remove or suppress key functionality from PowerPoint 2008 for Mac - functionality that would have made it very lucrative for Windows users to move over to the Mac platform for, and features that would have brought better compatibility between 2007/Win and 2008/Mac. The removal of macros and VBA support from the Mac version, for instance, was a sour point. But that doesn't necessarily mean that the Mac is a crappy platform.
I can't pretend to understand the issues involved in porting Office over to Mac/Unix (if that is what the Mac Office development team indeed did). But what I do know is that whatever failings PowerPoint 2008 may have, they do not necessarily imply a major issue with the Macintosh as a software development platform. It's a important distinction to make, I think. All that we the users can do is to bug the developers and manufacturers to expedite the development process and repair the issues as we understand them. (Of course, it'd be great to have something that runs 100% flawlessly out of the box... haaaaaa...)
Jeff Chapman
On 08/05/02 12:50, in article VA.00003f45.40456b60@localhost.com, "Steve Rindsberg" <abuse@localhost.com> wrote:
>>>> Thanks Jim for your help. I may be missing something but I'm not sure > the article you referenced helps me. I may have not described what I'm trying [quoted text clipped - 66 lines] > PPTools: www.pptools.com > ================================================ rondhuff@officeformac.com - 02 May 2008 12:48 GMT I apologize for thumping Macs. It was late and I was pretty frustrated and guess just needed to vent a little. It's just that the 2 programs that I bought the Mac to use, Keynote and iDVD, won't do what i used to do on my Windows box and what iDVD does do is much, much slower than my old Windows machine. Then I bought Mac Office and it won't do it either, even though Windows Office did. It's been a frustrating experience, but computers, in general, are like that.
Steve Rindsberg - 02 May 2008 15:41 GMT > I apologize for thumping Macs. It was late and I was pretty frustrated and guess just needed to vent a little. Fair enough. No more preaching from us, then. <g>
>It's just that the 2 programs that I bought the Mac to use, Keynote and iDVD, won't do what i used to do on my Windows box and what iDVD does do is much, much slower than my old Windows machine. Then I bought Mac Office and it won't do it either, even though Windows Office did. It's been a frustrating experience, but computers, in general, are like that.
================================================ Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com PPTools: www.pptools.com ================================================
Jeff Chapman - 02 May 2008 15:49 GMT It's totally understandable. I recently switched to using primarily Mac at home, and I also found that there are some things I could do easily on my Windows machine that just don't seem possible on the Mac. Missing functionality or something like that. I had few expectations regarding Office on Mac, and luckily I wasn't too badly disappointed. ;-)
But Office is not really the real reason why I switched to Mac. The whole Windows user experience, from 95 through Vista, really made me feel more like I was taking care of my computer, babysitting it and tending to its needs, than it was really contributing to my own life. I won't rant here about it - it's a bit of a subjective thing too. Suffice to say that after purchasing a new Vista box, and trying to upgrade some machines that were only two to three-years old to Vista with generally disappointing results in terms of system performance, I knew it was time to pull the plug. I still use Windows at work, and I have WinXP and Vista installed on Parallels Desktop for Mac at home, but I find I get more done on the Mac now, less time tweaking and babysitting.
Sorry, this is off the topic... another thread, another newsgroup...
Jeff
> I apologize for thumping Macs. It was late and I was pretty frustrated and > guess just needed to vent a little. It's just that the 2 programs that I [quoted text clipped - 3 lines] > Windows Office did. It's been a frustrating experience, but computers, in > general, are like that. Steve Rindsberg - 02 May 2008 15:41 GMT > > Oh, I wouldn't thump the Mac in general over what PPT will or won't do on it. > > Not here, anyway. <g> [quoted text clipped - 7 lines] > between 2007/Win and 2008/Mac. The removal of macros and VBA support from > the Mac version, for instance, was a sour point. Indeed. But from what I've read, the reason for that wasn't especially convoluted; costly feature to implement vs. limited $ and time budget. The more visible features won, VBA lost. To a lesser degree, the same thing happened in PPT 2007/Windows.
But to all the rest below ... yes. Exactly.
> But that doesn't > necessarily mean that the Mac is a crappy platform. [quoted text clipped - 84 lines] > > PPTools: www.pptools.com > > ================================================ ================================================ Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com PPTools: www.pptools.com ================================================
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