I have a hard time believing that this is a problem with PowerPoint
itself, but I could be wrong. Once PowerPoint passes the URL to the
browser, I think it is all in the browser's hands. Have you checked the
URL to make sure you have the right one? Try copying and pasting what
you have in PowerPoint directly into your browser.
OK, I take back part of what I said. PowerPoint could be messing up the
link if it has funky characters in it (commas, for example, might mess
things up). Try this. Go to http://tinyurl.com/ and create a small URL
for your link (you can use any service like tinyurl; that just happens
to be the one I know off the top of my head). Try linking to the tiny
URL that is created.
--David
--
David Marcovitz
Microsoft PowerPoint MVP
Author of _Powerful PowerPoint for Educators_
http://www.PowerfulPowerPoint.com/
I tested the link by copying and pasting from PowerPoint to my browser, and
this doesn't seem to work, either. Does it matter that I'm not using IE as my
default browser?
"springmanh" <sprin...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:47A983DE-0F28-44BA...@microsoft.com...
--
David Marcovitz
Microsoft PowerPoint MVP
Author of _Powerful PowerPoint for Educators_
http://www.PowerfulPowerPoint.com/
In article <47A983DE-0F28-44BA...@microsoft.com>,
I know that PPT will fail if you link to a PPT file or some other file that
it's supposed to *open* when the file is behind a password challenge.
If the link is to an openable file, it doesn't pass the url to the browser, it
attempts to download and open the file directly; since it has no mechanism
for answering password challenges, opening files from protected directories is
a non-starter.
I'm not clear on what you're linking to though, so none of that may be
relevant.
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