Unfortunately the slides turned out to be too big for the
screen so that a good third of each of the slides was lost
to the audience (same goes for looking at them on the
laptop that they were on).
This has never happened before, and we have presented
presentations across the world with these templates. Also
everybody else who presented had no problems with their
display.
First thing I checked was that the presentation page set
up was the same as the template - template page set up is
Width 24 and Height 18 - and it was. Have tested the
presenation on laptops here in England and everything is
okay. Unfortunately the original lap top is not available
to do any tests on.
Someone has mentioned that maybe our template is optimized
to be displayed at a certain resolution???
This problem happened a few weeks ago and I am supposed to
give some advice on what went wrong .
I wondered if anyone else had come across this problem
before?
Thankyou very much
Any input would be appreciated.
--
Geetesh Bajaj, Microsoft PowerPoint MVP
http://www.indezine.com
http://www.powerpointed.com
The PowerPoint Blog at http://www.indezine.com/blog/
"Karen" <anon...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:aaed01c43671$b4aa23b0$a301...@phx.gbl...
Could you explain to me in a little more detail what you
mean by the lap top only being able to show some fo teh
resolution?
Thanks
>.
>
However, it does not seem to be the problem in your case since you say your
presentation was the only one with problems - and all others ran well from
the same laptop.
That's all the more ironic since PowerPoint by itself is resoution
independent.
--
Geetesh Bajaj, Microsoft PowerPoint MVP
http://www.indezine.com
Texture Triumph
http://www.powerpointed.com/001100/012/
"Karen" <anon...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:ab1801c43678$c303d440$a501...@phx.gbl...
Thanks for all your help so far.
Karen
>.
>
--
Geetesh Bajaj, Microsoft PowerPoint MVP
http://www.indezine.com
Texture Triumph
http://www.powerpointed.com/001100/012/
<anon...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:ab9701c4367f$d10bbb50$a301...@phx.gbl...
To add a bit to Geetesh's answer:
You'll want to be certain that the laptop is set to the same resolution as the
projector. Rightclick the desktop, choose Properties and on the Settings tab,
set the appropriate resolution.
You may need to do the same for both monitors and/or remove the check next to
"Extend my desktop onto this monitor" if the laptop supports multiple monitors.
Also, check the slide show settings for your own presentation:
Choose Slide Show, Set Up Show
Verify that the settings for multiple monitors are what you expect them to be
AND that they make sense in the context of the equipment in use where the
presentations are being held. AKA Don't set it up for multiple monitors unless
you're sure that multiple monitors will be available <g>
Set "Slide Show Resolution" to "[Use Current Resolution]"
--
Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP
PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com
PPTools: www.pptools.com