Saving video

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Guest

My video is working fine in PP, BUT I need to take the video presentation to another computer. How Do I do that, It seem to me that every time I save the presentation to cd for transfer I only save the first frame of the video. What are my options? By the way I am not using a desktop, but a large video editing system
 
Never save to a CD. Use your CD burning sosftware and burn both the
presentation and the video file to the CD. Videos are always linked and
never embedded, so they must travel with the presentation.
--
Sonia, MS PowerPoint MVP Team
Autorun CD software, templates, and tutorials
http://www.soniacoleman.com/

see and hear said:
My video is working fine in PP, BUT I need to take the video presentation
to another computer. How Do I do that, It seem to me that every time I
save the presentation to cd for transfer I only save the first frame of the
video. What are my options? By the way I am not using a desktop, but a
large video editing system.
 
[CRITICAL UPDATE - Anyone using Office 2003 should install the critical
update as soon as possible. From PowerPoint, choose "Help -> Check for
Updates".]

Hello,

If you are using PowerPoint 2003, this capability is built into the product
(Package for CD command). This solution bundles the presentation and, by
default, all of it's supporting (linked) files as well as the new
PowerPoint Viewer 2003 to a CD so that when the CD is loaded on to a
supported system the presentation will be opened up automatically in
PowerPoint Viewer 2003. Of course you don't have to include the Viewer or
make it an autorun CD but, instead, simply use the feature to package a
presentation and all of its supporting files to a CD for archiving or
transporting from one computer to another. If you are not running Windows
XP (required for burning the CD directly from within PowerPoint 2003) or do
not have a CD burner, the same feature (Package for CD) includes an option
to Save to Folder instead of CD so that you can create a portable,
distributable folder which can be moved to another system, server, etc.,
from outside of PowerPoint using any one of a number of 3rd party tools for
distributing large files.

For customers not using PowerPoint 2003 there are a variety manual
workarounds (multiple steps usually starting with using the Pack and Go
feature) and 3rd party workarounds that I will leave to others to suggest.

If you (or anyone else reading this message) think that PowerPoint should
provide additional options for saving presentations to removable drives,
don't forget to send your feedback (in YOUR OWN WORDS, please) to Microsoft
at:

http://register.microsoft.com/mswish/suggestion.asp

As with all product suggestions, it's important that you not just state
your wish but also WHY it is important to you that your product suggestion
be implemented by Microsoft. Microsoft receives thousands of product
suggestions every day and we read each one but, in any given product
development cycle, there are only sufficient resources to address the ones
that are most important to our customers so take the extra time to state
your case as clearly and completely as possible.

IMPORTANT: Each submission should be a single suggestion (not a list of
suggestions).

John Langhans
Microsoft Corporation
Supportability Program Manager
Microsoft Office PowerPoint for Windows
Microsoft Office Picture Manager for Windows

For FAQ's, highlights and top issues, visit the Microsoft PowerPoint
support center at: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?pr=ppt
Search the Microsoft Knowledge Base at:
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?pr=kbhowto

This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.
Use of any included script samples are subject to the terms specified at
http://www.microsoft.com/info/cpyright.htm
 
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