"DeanH" wrote:
> Have you tried Save As, and choose a format like jpg, png. This can produce
> individual images of each PowerPoint slide, or can do the whole file at once.
> Do a test to which is best for you, depends on whether the original has
> vector or raster objects, results in different resulting file sizes.
> If you are after the image to look like it is a Window, try Alt-PrintScreen,
> that will capture the active window, this capture can then be inserted into
> your manual, or into a new PowerPoint file then saveAs to reduce file size
> again. There are other software like SnagIt that can capture screens and can
> manipulate the result to a certain extent. I have not used it, but others on
> this site have mentioned it many times.
> If the manual is not going to be distributed electronically, all the images
> could be linked instead of embedded, this can reduce the manual file size. If
> it is, can you PDF? This can reduce the file size, depending on the PDF
> conversion settings.
> I hope this gives you some options to reduce the size of your manual.
> DeanH
You can do everything in WORD.
Open the PICTURE TOOL BAR
On the tool bar is an icon that looks like a little picture with four arrows
pushing in at the corners. The text help when you point at the icon is
"Compress Pictures"
Select this Icon.
The Compress Pictures window gives you several options.
This will compress the pictures substantially.
Hope this helps,
1. Get it the size you want by resizing in Word.
1. Cut the picture to the clipboard. (Cut, not copy, to delete it.)
2. Paste Special, and choose gif (for diagrams, etc.) or jpeg (for real
picture) as the format. The paste special should put it back exactly
where you took it from.
The file size difference when you have many pictures can be huge. I've
cut files from >10MB to less than 1MB doing this.
However, *warning*: If you resize the picture after doing this, Word
puts it back into its internal format, losing the efficiency of the gif
or jpeg encoding. So you have to do the cut / paste special sequence
over again to avoid bloat.
--
Greg