We were just talking about such people yesterday. To mix portrait and
landscape:
http://www.rdpslides.com/pptfaq/FAQ00042.htm
--
Regards,
Glen Millar
Microsoft PPT MVP
http://www.powerpointworkbench.com/
Please tell us your ppt version, and get back to us here
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"Sharon Clements" <sc...@georgetown.edu> wrote in message
news:022301c35225$f29c6830$a601...@phx.gbl...
You can always set up your presentation's page size as square, but in the
end, it all comes down to this:
If you use a data projector, you're going to be projecting a 4 x 3
proportioned landscape image, so you may as well stick with the standard PPT
screen show size. Unless you turn the projector on its side, ain't nothing
you can do about it. <g>
Oops. I didn't read the bit about links to another file (well, I did but it
never clicked). Steve's right... you're sunk.
--
Regards,
Glen Millar
Microsoft PPT MVP
http://www.powerpointworkbench.com/
Please tell us your ppt version, and get back to us here
"Steve Rindsberg" <ab...@localhost.com> wrote in message
news:e$OZsRjU...@tk2msftngp13.phx.gbl...
I wouldn't put it exactly that way.
I'd put it more like this:
Traditional 35mm slides: If you have a 4 x 3 foot screen and fill it left
to right with a landscape slide, then switch to a portrait oriented slide,
the image runs off top and bottom. If you need to mix orientations, you
have to make the portait image fit and live with the fact that the landscape
images will now be smaller.
Brave New World, Data Projector: Instead of changing the size of the image
on the screen, you fill screen with the 4 x 3 image of the monitor. Now you
drop your portrait images in so they fill top to bottom (same size as ever)
but your landscape images fill left to right.
The portrait images can still only be as high as the screen is high.