Copy & Pasting into a presentation creates an OLE object within PowerPoint
instead of a picture image. While they may look the same on the slide, they
are handled very differently.
An OLE object can not be compressed. An OLE object may depend on some
components being installed on the receiving computer. An OLE object may
bring other things into the presentation that are not wanted (hyperlinks,
etc.). An OLE object is larger than the picture it displays.
Insert Pict from file just brings the image, which PowerPoint can understand
and compress.
--
Bill Dilworth
A proud member of the Microsoft PPT MVP Team
Users helping fellow users.
http://billdilworth.mvps.org
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yahoo2@ Please read the PowerPoint FAQ pages.
yahoo. They answer most of our questions.
com
www.pptfaq.com
..
"Patrick" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:48C75F57-94D6-4274-BDD8-(E-Mail Removed)...
> David
> Thank you for the response. But do you know the reason for the limitation
> of
> Copy/Paste?
> Patrick
>
> "David M. Marcovitz" wrote:
>
>> This is one of the many reasons to always use Insert/Picture/From File
>> when
>> inserting a new picture. Copy/Paste is best for pictures that are already
>> in your presentation and you want them on a new slide.
>> --David
>>
>> --
>> David M. Marcovitz
>> Microsoft PowerPoint MVP
>> Director of Graduate Programs in Educational Technology
>> Loyola College in Maryland
>> Author of _Powerful PowerPoint for Educators_
>> http://www.PowerfulPowerPoint.com/
>>
>> "=?Utf-8?B?UGF0cmljaw==?=" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in
>> news:0E1C53C5-1D6B-4E25-857C-(E-Mail Removed):
>>
>> > Here's the scenario:
>> > I used Copy/Patse to bring a jpg image into a slide. I subsequenlty
>> > used the "set transparent color" button on the Picture toolbar to make
>> > the image's background transparent. The result gave me a very "fuzzy"
>> > background. I then did a test by bringing the image in using:
>> > Insert/Picture/ From File. I then performed the exact same technique
>> > to make this image's background transparent. The result of this test
>> > gave me exactly what I was looking for: No fuzzy" background. Is this
>> > an inherent limitation with copy/paste?
>> >
>>
>>