
by Geetesh Bajaj, January 19, 2016
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Microsoft Sway: Conversation with Chris Pratley
Chris Pratley is General Manager of Microsoft Sway, a new member of the Office suite of apps. His team also develops Docs.com, a social publishing site for professionals that features high fidelity Office content, and Office Lens, a cross-platform mobile app to turn photos of documents and whiteboards into reusable content in OneNote, Word and other apps. Chris lives in Seattle with his wife and two sons. In this conversation, Chris talks about Microsoft Sway.
Read the conversation here
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Vimeo Embeds with G-Tools PowerPoint Add-in: Conversation with Jamie Garroch
Jamie Garroch, CEO of YOUpresent (formerly GMARK) founded the company to provide presentation professionals with presentation software, content and training. Jamie uses a range of presentation and e-learning tools on PC and Mac from PowerPoint to Keynote, Adobe CS and iSpring for presentations and Articulate Storyline for e-learning. He also uses PowerPoint as a programming environment to create authoring automation for his company's productivity needs, custom
add-ins for clients and off-the-shelf products for presentation designers. In this conversation, Jamie discusses the Vimeo embed abilities within his G-Tools add-in for PowerPoint.
Read the conversation here
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Learn Linking in PowerPoint
Anatomy of a Link
Linking (or hyperlinking) makes objects and documents "connected" to each other. To provide an analogy, consider each slide or presentation to be an individual computer on a network. Individual computers do some awesome work, but the network is much more useful, and increases the worth of each individual computer. In this case, the linking adds the "network" to your PowerPoint files. Linking can happen from one slide to another, or even to another file or a website
from within PowerPoint presentations. In each of these linking scenarios, you will find that three factors are always present.
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Learn PowerPoint 2013 for Windows
Linking Between Slides
While you can link from an anchor object on a slide to almost anywhere, you will certainly want first to explore how you can link between slides in the same presentation. This is simple to do, and also very useful because it lets you use your presentation in a non-linear way and you are not limited to viewing your slides in a sequential order.
Linking to Another Presentation
We already explored how you can link from an anchor object to any slide within the active presentation. However, this sort of linking is only the beginning of the possibilities for linking that PowerPoint 2013 provides. To take this to the next level, we will learn how you can link from an anchor object to any other PowerPoint presentation. In fact, you can also link to a particular slide in another presentation too!
Linking to Web Pages
Linking from within PowerPoint allows you to use your slides as a jumping point to provide even more content! We all know that the internet is a storehouse of so much content, and sometimes you may want a click on your slide to open a web page. Show the web page to your audience, close it and you are back on the slide you clicked. You can now seamlessly move on to your next slide. This sort of activity is easy to recreate.
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Here's the new, fifth set of animated Gears you can use within your slides - we call this one Even More Gears! This series is independent of the earlier series, and comes in both animated and non-animated versions.
Why should you get this series? So that you can save time! Yes, the time-consuming process of using Gears and animating them in PowerPoint is now made easy again.
You can just copy these gears from the downloaded presentation and directly paste them within your own slides. What could be easier? And what do you get? Not 1, not 2 - but 6 highly detailed gear styles, each of them in so many sizes!
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