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Dave Melvin
I work for a group of physicians who do a lot of presentations nationally
and internationally. One of them showed me something today I've never seen
before:
He opens up a presentation on his laptop (WinXP Pro, Office 2003). The
presentation has several avi and mpeg movies on various slides. We run
through it, everything works fine. We then connect his laptop to a projector
via VGA cable to display the slideshow to the as-yet-to-arrive audience. We
go through the presentation once again and some of the media files do not
work! Somehow the links have been broken by simply connecting the laptop to
an external display. Fortunately, he has a copy of Fix Links so a few
seconds later everything is working again.
The presentation and media files are all in the same folder - my
understanding was that PowerPoint would look for the location that the file
was originally linked from, if it didn't exist, it would then look in the
folder that holds the presentation. If the media files were there, they
would play.
I have never seen the simple act of connecting to an external display break
the links in a presentation before. He told me this had been happening to
him and frankly, I didn't believe him until I saw it with my own eyes today.
Anyone experience anything like this before?
Dave
and internationally. One of them showed me something today I've never seen
before:
He opens up a presentation on his laptop (WinXP Pro, Office 2003). The
presentation has several avi and mpeg movies on various slides. We run
through it, everything works fine. We then connect his laptop to a projector
via VGA cable to display the slideshow to the as-yet-to-arrive audience. We
go through the presentation once again and some of the media files do not
work! Somehow the links have been broken by simply connecting the laptop to
an external display. Fortunately, he has a copy of Fix Links so a few
seconds later everything is working again.
The presentation and media files are all in the same folder - my
understanding was that PowerPoint would look for the location that the file
was originally linked from, if it didn't exist, it would then look in the
folder that holds the presentation. If the media files were there, they
would play.
I have never seen the simple act of connecting to an external display break
the links in a presentation before. He told me this had been happening to
him and frankly, I didn't believe him until I saw it with my own eyes today.
Anyone experience anything like this before?
Dave