syncing images with audio words

  • Thread starter Thread starter Guest
  • Start date Start date
G

Guest

dear powerpoint pros,


I have an mp3 file with the reading of a poem, and I want to basically get
powerpoint to show images on time with the associated words of the poem, any
ideas on the best way to set this up? thanks guys.
 
[CRITICAL UPDATE - Anyone using Office 2003 should install the Critical
Update or Service Pack 1 for Office 2003 as soon as possible. From
PowerPoint, choose "Help -> Check for Updates".]

[TOP ISSUE - Are you having difficulty opening presentations in PowerPoint
that you just created (you can save, but not open)? -
http://support.microsoft.com/?id=329820]

Hello,

If you are using a single audio file and only one slide (with multiple
images) you will get the best results (since you can use the slides
built-in timeline to synchronize the beginning of one event with the
beginning or ending of some other event). However, PowerPoint doesn't try
to be a multimedia authoring tool, so it doesn't support the kind of
timing/synchronization that, perhaps, you are looking for. For example,
because PowerPoint can only synchronize the BEGINNING of the media to
another event, it can't control the beginning of other events based on how
many seconds of a media file has been played. The features for this degree
of timing control are simply not built into the product.

Part of this is because two completely different architectures are used.
For multimedia playback we use system API calls (PowerPoint has very little
control over what happens after the media has begun to play) while
animations and transitions are controlled using PowerPoint's built in
procedures. Then, add to that, system specific performance when it comes to
moving data between physical devices, virtual system memory and the memory
that PowerPoint is using, etc and, because tight synchronization was never
a design goal for PowerPoint, you will get variable playback even on the
same system because the state of the system resources and memory is
different than the last time the presentation was shown.

So, for example, if you want to sychronize animations and transitions with
something other than just the beginning of media playback (on same slide or
over multiple slides), you will get inconsistent results from system to
system or even on the same system (depending on what data is still cached
in virtual memory). For true synchronization you should look into tools
which output to a streaming format (such as movie), So, for example, if
synchronization is the primary factor for choosing the right tool and your
"presentation" consists primarily of photos (picture shows), a simple
application like "Microsoft Plus! Photo Story" is a much better tool than
PowerPoint.

If some kind of more deterministic, system independent, multimedia
synchronization with animations and transitions is important to you (or
anyone else reading this message) for Microsoft to consider for some future
version of PowerPoint (or if it's not possible, perhaps features within
PowerPoint to help you avoid trying to sychronize something that we can't
guarantee will always be synchronized), so you don't have to attempt to
exporting to other formats (movies, shockwave flash, etc.), which would
result is some loss of formatting and/or fidelity, don't forget to send
your feedback (in YOUR OWN WORDS, please) to Microsoft by either:

PREFERRED METHOD:

A) If you are using Microsoft's web-based, online newsreader for Office
communities
(http://www.microsoft.com/office/community/en-us/default.mspx?dg=microsoft.p
ublic.powerpoint), check to see whether or not the suggestion has been
submitted before (Show -> Suggestions for Microsoft) and, if so, add your
vote to the suggestion submission. If the suggestion has not been submitted
before, click on the "New" drop-down menu and choose "Suggestion for
Microsoft" from directly within the newsreader web page.

OR, NEXT BEST METHOD:

B) If you are using another newsreader (such as Microsoft Outlook Express),
submit your suggestion using your web browser at the following address:
http://register.microsoft.com/mswish/suggestion.asp

It's VERY important that, for EACH wish, you describe in detail, WHY it is
important TO YOU that your product suggestion be implemented. A good wish
submssion includes WHAT scenario, work-flow, or end-result is blocked by
not having a specific feature, HOW MUCH time and effort ($$$) is spent
working around a specific limitation of the current product, etc. Remember
that 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 so that we can FEEL YOUR PAIN.

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.
 
I wouldn't even try. PowerPoint doesn't do synching and even on your own
machine the presentation may run differently from one play to another.
 
John L. gave the technical reasons this is difficult and Sonia gave the
'voice of experience.' But in reality, if you are not looking for absolute
perfection, you can time your animations "loosely" to your poem narration.

First I would recommend converting the MP3 to a .wav audio format (and
adjusting PPT's settings) so it can be embedded into the actual
presentation. Note: This will make the file significantly larger. Next add
all of your images to your slides. Add your narration. Now spends lots of
time playing with the animation settings - and remember you cannot count on
the playback being exactly the same, so have some overlap in your animations
and have your final animation occur a few seconds before the end of the
narration (it is better to have more narration than animation over silence
at the end).

Good luck!

--
Best Regards,
Troy Chollar
TLC Creative Services, Inc.
troy at tlc creative dot com
www dot tlccreative dot com
==================================
A Microsoft PowerPoint MVP
==================================
 
joe,

The only sure fire way I know of doing this....is to have each sentance / block / chunk as seperate audio files.

Then you can get powerpoint to
show picture
play audio clip
show next picture
play next audio clip

If you feel this would break up the flow of the audio, then you're out of luck

Chees
TAJ Simmons
microsoft powerpoint mvp

awesome - powerpoint backgrounds,
free powerpoint templates, tutorials, hints and tips etc
http://www.powerpointbackgrounds.com
 
Back
Top