Music and video presentation from one machine to another

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Help!!! Help!!!!!! For the last 10 hours I built a 60 slide presentation on my desk top. The presentation was then saved to a disc and the disc tested and it works flawlessly. I then put the disc into the IBM Thinkpad that has to be used in my presentation tomorrow and the presentation works great except for the music and video that was added to some of the slides does not play!!! I have to put on this presentation in the morning and it is now 2:15 am eastern standard time! Someone please help me to repair this problem! It has to be something simple but I can not figure it out!! Thanks for the return in advance!! Ben
 
Did you include the music and video files on the disk? Are you playing it
in PowerPoint or the Viewer? Which version?
--
Sonia, MS PowerPoint MVP Team
Autorun CD software, templates, and tutorials
http://www.soniacoleman.com/

Ben said:
Help!!! Help!!!!!! For the last 10 hours I built a 60 slide presentation
on my desk top. The presentation was then saved to a disc and the disc
tested and it works flawlessly. I then put the disc into the IBM Thinkpad
that has to be used in my presentation tomorrow and the presentation works
great except for the music and video that was added to some of the slides
does not play!!! I have to put on this presentation in the morning and it
is now 2:15 am eastern standard time! Someone please help me to repair this
problem! It has to be something simple but I can not figure it out!!
Thanks for the return in advance!! Ben
 
Hey Sonia! Thanks for replying!! The disc is complete and plays perfectly through the desk top computer that I originally saved from. The sound plays on cue and the 5 minute video plays on cue during slide 44 but when I pull the disc out of the desk top and load it in the IBM Thinkpad the music and video do not play. The rest of the presentation works fine. The special effects, animation, etc. all work fine, just no inserted songs or video.... Both PPT versions are 2002 PPT. I am alos playing it by opening up PPT and then loading up the presentation and starting it as you would if it were saved on the hard drive.... Help!!
 
But you didn't answer my question - - did you include the music and video
files on the disk? When you distribute a presentation you must also
distribute any linked files. Media files are linked, not embedded in the
presentation, with the exception of WAV files sometimes.

Your presentation will run fine from the disk on your desktop because the
media files are on the hard drive and PowerPoint can find them.

See the following:

Links break when I move presentation (and at other times)
http://www.rdpslides.com/pptfaq/FAQ00155.htm

Ben said:
Hey Sonia! Thanks for replying!! The disc is complete and plays
perfectly through the desk top computer that I originally saved from. The
sound plays on cue and the 5 minute video plays on cue during slide 44 but
when I pull the disc out of the desk top and load it in the IBM Thinkpad the
music and video do not play. The rest of the presentation works fine. The
special effects, animation, etc. all work fine, just no inserted songs or
video.... Both PPT versions are 2002 PPT. I am alos playing it by opening
up PPT and then loading up the presentation and starting it as you would if
it were saved on the hard drive.... Help!!
 
I guess I am not sure what you are asking Sonia, sorry... All I did was to go to insert, movies and sound from file, choose that file and it automatically inserted it into my slide... It may be doing just that, looking for it on my hard drive to play it... How do I get it into the disc permantly so it will play on the IBM? Thanks for you patience! I will be looking at your included link while I await your reply.... By the way, your "studio" is georgous!
 
I know that it says "Insert", but that's misleading. What is inserted is a
link - - a pointer to the file. The presentation does not include the video
and music files. They remain as standalone files that are opened by
PowerPoint when the presentation is played. PowerPoint looks at the link
and determines where to find the media file. It then locates it, opens it,
and plays it from within your presentation.

So when you copy your presentation to the disk also copy the video and audio
files. By the way, don't ever save a presentation directly to removable
media (floppy, zip, etc.). Your presentation is likely to become unuseable.

Ben said:
I guess I am not sure what you are asking Sonia, sorry... All I did was
to go to insert, movies and sound from file, choose that file and it
automatically inserted it into my slide... It may be doing just that,
looking for it on my hard drive to play it... How do I get it into the disc
permantly so it will play on the IBM? Thanks for you patience! I will be
looking at your included link while I await your reply.... By the way, your
"studio" is georgous!
 
Thanks Sonia! I will take your advice and see if I can get the video and sound off of the desk top and load it in the lap top so maybe the links will hook up... Have a good day!! Ben
 
Ben,

One other thing to be aware of....

If the videos and sounds where originally in this directory

c:\thisiswhere\Ikeepmystuff\videos

Then be sure to make the same drive and directory structure on the new pc match exactly

Otherwise powerpoint may not find your videos or sounds when it comes to show time

Cheers
TAJ Simmons
microsoft powerpoint mvp

awesome - powerpoint backgrounds,
free powerpoint templates, tutorials, hints and tips etc
http://www.powerpointbackgrounds.com
 
Ben, your problem is much like mine. See "Powerpoint viewer does not run presentations as planned".
Like you I spent hours making a ppt just like I wanted that ran fine in "view slide show" of my power point program.
I then copied all files including the sounds video clips, photos to a disk along with the ppt file. The sounds and video
did not work properly in Power Point viewer 2003 on another PC. So I tried opening the same file from the viewer
on my PC where I composed the ppt file and the same thing happened - the slides were all there but zipped through
too fast and none of the video clips would play. Also all the sound files were out of sync with the slides even though
they worked perfect from original the powerpoint program.
Russ
 
According to his posts, Ben is not using the Viewer. He's using PowerPoint
and "The special effects, animation, etc. all work fine, just no inserted
songs or video", Different issue.

ripo said:
Ben, your problem is much like mine. See "Powerpoint viewer does not run presentations as planned".
Like you I spent hours making a ppt just like I wanted that ran fine in
"view slide show" of my power point program.
I then copied all files including the sounds video clips, photos to a disk
along with the ppt file. The sounds and video
did not work properly in Power Point viewer 2003 on another PC. So I
tried opening the same file from the viewer
on my PC where I composed the ppt file and the same thing happened - the
slides were all there but zipped through
too fast and none of the video clips would play. Also all the sound files
were out of sync with the slides even though
 
[CRITICAL UPDATE - Anyone using Office 2003 should install the critical
update as soon as possible. From PowerPoint, choose "Help -> Check for
Updates".]

Hello,

PowerPoint will look in the same directory as the presentation for linked
multimedia if it cannot find the external file where it expects to find it.
If you move a presentation (from the Windows Explorer or CD burning
software, for example) to a new volume/drive (such as from Hard Drive to CD
Drive) PowerPoint will continue to look to the original location for any
linked multimedia and, if it cannot be found, PowerPoint will look in the
same directory as the presentation and, if still not found, the link will
not work.

It's very easy to break links between presentations and their supporting
files (such as multimedia and other presentations) when moving files around
in the Windows Explorer or from one system to another because Windows
doesn't know that there are dependencies in the presentation files, or that
the supporting files are linked to by other documents.

HOW TO PREVENT BROKEN LINKS FROM HAPPENING:

Because of this, in the future, the best way to distribute your
presentations or move/copy/send presentations from one location to another
(while the links are NOT yet broken) is to use the built-in capabilities of
PowerPoint.

The feature and procedure you use will depend on how you plan on sharing,
moving or distributing your presentation.

If your intention it to simply move your presentation from one machine to
another, or to distribute it via some kind of removable media (such as
floppy or CD), or to make it available on some common file server
accessible from other machines on your network, then you will want to use
either Pack and Go or Package for CD (depending on your version of
PowerPoint). Each of them work differently but the important thing to know
is that in either case they can be used to copy the presentation and all
dependent files from one location to another (different folder, different
volume, different computer, etc.). And, although each feature is primarily
designed to work with removable media (Floppy disks for Pack and Go,
Recordable CD for Package for CD) they can actually be used to move a
presentation directly to another folder on same hard-drive, different
volume, network location, etc. without having to use any removable media at
all.

PACK AND GO:
1) Open presentation and verify that all links are working
2) File -> Pack and Go (pack to empty folder <I'll call it "Packed"> on
hard drive with enough room to contain presentation and all linked files)
3) Exit PowerPoint and, in Windows Explorer, go to the "Packed" folder
4) Open prez0.ppz with PNGSETUP.EXE (these should be only two files in the
"Packed") and unpack to another empty folder <I'll call it "UnPacked">
The contents of the "UnPacked" folder can now be moved/copied to another
computer, burned to CD, etc with links updated appropriately.

PACKAGE FOR CD - PowerPoint 2003 only
1) Open presentation and verify that all links are working
2) File -> Package for CD
3) If you are running Windows XP and have CD-Burner simply click "Save to
CD" button
4) Otherwise, click "Save to Folder" button. When done, the contents of
this folder can now be moved/copied to another computer, burned to CD, etc
with links updated appropriately.

For presentation that are going be distributed on the internet, you should
save your presentations as either HTML or (in PowerPoint 2002 or 2003)
MHTML. MHTML (single file web page) has the added advantage that it can be
sent through e-mail with all of the linked content intact. In both cases
they will be, by default, opened and displayed in the recipients internet
browser. However, depending on your version of PowerPoint (once again), the
HTML (2000 or later) and MHTML (2002 and later) file can include all of
the necessary data to open the presentation up directly in PowerPoint so
that you get the full fidelity of a native PowerPoint slide show (instead
of the more limited rendering possible through HTML and your browser).

Of course these features won't fix links that have already been broken
(because, pehaps, you moved a presentation or supporting files from Windows
Explorer) but, when used properly they can prevent you from breaking links
to your supporting content (such as multimedia files) when moving, sharing
or distributing your presentations.

If you (or anyone else reading this message) think that PowerPoint should
provide additional tools (or update existing tools) for managing
presentations and their supporting content and/or to
find/manage/repair/etc. links (broken or otherwise) to supporting content,
don't forget to send your feedback (in YOUR OWN WORDS, please) to Microsoft
at:

http://register.microsoft.com/mswish/suggestion.asp

As with all product suggestions, it's important that you not just state
your wish but also WHY it is important to you that your product suggestion
be implemented by Microsoft. Microsoft receives thousands of product
suggestions every day and we read each one but, in any given product
development cycle, there are only sufficient resources to address the ones
that are most important to our customers so take the extra time to state
your case as clearly and completely as possible.

IMPORTANT: Each submission should be a single suggestion (not a list of
suggestions)

John Langhans
Microsoft Corporation
Supportability Program Manager
Microsoft Office PowerPoint for Windows
Microsoft Office Picture Manager for Windows

For FAQ's, highlights and top issues, visit the Microsoft PowerPoint
support center at: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?pr=ppt
Search the Microsoft Knowledge Base at:
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?pr=kbhowto

This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.
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