Power Point Versions Incompatable

M

MaryT

A coworker of my daughter told her that Office 2000 NT -
Power Point and Office XP - Power Point are
incompatable, when she printed her slides they were not
the quality of his printed from Office XP. Is this true
or is there a setting that she needs to change on her
Office 2000 NT?
 
B

Bill Foley

The programs are quite compatible, except for a couple of things. There are
quite a bit more animations in Office XP than in Office 2000. By the way,
NT is probably the version of the Windows Operating System and has nothing
to do with Office!

Printing presentations shouldn't have any impact unless these animation
differences rear their ugly head. If you are creating a presentation using
Office XP, and you might need to view/show it on an Office 2000 version of
PowerPoint, you can disable the new features (Under "Tools" menu, "Options")
in XP so this problem doesn't occur. Keep in mind that the file can still
be shown in Office 2000 but the new animations won't work. Instead, the
objects will just appear when the slide comes up since Office 2000 can't
recognize the new animation.

Hope this helps!
 
U

Ute Simon

MaryT said:
A coworker of my daughter told her that Office 2000 NT -
Power Point and Office XP - Power Point are
incompatable, when she printed her slides they were not
the quality of his printed from Office XP. Is this true
or is there a setting that she needs to change on her
Office 2000 NT?

Mary,
as Bill said: the Office resp. PowerPoint versions 2000 and 2002 are
compatible. BUT: As you mention "NT", I suspect that her computer has
Windows NT as the operating system and his has Windows XP (which is a newer
version). Fonts are installed with the operating system and if he used a
font that is not present in her WinNT, she'll get a different print. So the
only thing she might have to do is to install a missing font, not upgrade
the whole system.

Kind regards,
Ute
 
S

Sonia

Were they printing slides from the same presentation? If not, that could
explain the difference in quality, depending on what the differences were.
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top