A presentation of 500 MB is going to choke most systems and there's really no
point in trying to convert a file of that size to video. What do you mean when
you say that "the Viewer doesn't work"? Does it give you a message? Does it
run but not display correctly? Please provide the details.
But first, I would recommend that you work to decrease the size of the
presentation file. See:
Why are my PowerPoint files so big? What can I do about it?
http://www.rdpslides.com/pptfaq/FAQ00062.htm
--
Sonia Coleman
Microsoft PowerPoint MVP Team
Autorun Software, Templates and Tutorials
http://www.soniacoleman.com
"oakland" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:2D91F67F-2C6A-451D-8F3D-(E-Mail Removed)...
>
>
> "Sonia" wrote:
>
>> Yes, but I doubt that your question stops there. Just like CD's, DVD's can
>> be
>> used to store data files. Just copying a presentation file onto a DVD will
>> not
>> make it play in a DVD player. Please let us know what your full question is
>> and
>> what version of PowerPoint and Windows you are using.
>> --
>>
>> Sonia Coleman
>> Microsoft PowerPoint MVP Team
>> Autorun Software, Templates and Tutorials
>> http://www.soniacoleman.com
>>
>> "MDBWLM" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
>> news:8BD0BFBD-D6C8-4A7E-8C55-(E-Mail Removed)...
>> >
>>
>> same question: I have a sophisticated presentation in format Powerpoint 2003,
>> XP
>> about 500Mb
> the downloaded powerpoint viewer does not work (maybe 500 Mb is over its
> limit)
> I would like to burn the presentation as I see it on my display on a dvd. How?
> I filmed it on a camcorder and burned that film on a DVD. But ...quality is
> not very good and what an akward way to do it
> Yhank you