R
Richard Pini
Hello all
I've never used Powerpoint before, and suddenly need to put together a
presentation in very little time. I'm learning the basics of what I
need to do, from the little pdf manual that came with the installation.
However, nowhere have I been able to find information on how best to
scan images (since this will be mostly images, not text) for a
projected presentation (like an old-fashioned slide show in an
auditorium for a large audience).
I'm guessing that the higher the resolution of the scan, the better -
although then it would seem that each image file would be larger and
thus slower to load/project. Some image files that I have only exist as
jpegs at 72 dpi - I could up the dpi in Photoshop but that doesn't add
detail, so that seems useless.
Please, can anyone give a few words of wisdow here, or point me to a
source of information? (The Microsoft site doesn't seem to have
anything useful in this regard, and a Google search didn't help
either.)
Thanks much in advance -
Richard Pini
--
I've never used Powerpoint before, and suddenly need to put together a
presentation in very little time. I'm learning the basics of what I
need to do, from the little pdf manual that came with the installation.
However, nowhere have I been able to find information on how best to
scan images (since this will be mostly images, not text) for a
projected presentation (like an old-fashioned slide show in an
auditorium for a large audience).
I'm guessing that the higher the resolution of the scan, the better -
although then it would seem that each image file would be larger and
thus slower to load/project. Some image files that I have only exist as
jpegs at 72 dpi - I could up the dpi in Photoshop but that doesn't add
detail, so that seems useless.
Please, can anyone give a few words of wisdow here, or point me to a
source of information? (The Microsoft site doesn't seem to have
anything useful in this regard, and a Google search didn't help
either.)
Thanks much in advance -
Richard Pini
--