N nuchamber Nov 28, 2009 #1 how is it done: present an apparently seamless verticle or horizontal flow of slides
G Glen Millar Nov 29, 2009 #2 Hi, You could try the Push slide transition and make one slide go away and the next one come in? -- Regards, Glen Millar Microsoft PPT MVP Tutorials and PowerPoint animations at the original www.pptworkbench.com glen at pptworkbench dot com See you at PowerPoint Live? www.pptlive.com
Hi, You could try the Push slide transition and make one slide go away and the next one come in? -- Regards, Glen Millar Microsoft PPT MVP Tutorials and PowerPoint animations at the original www.pptworkbench.com glen at pptworkbench dot com See you at PowerPoint Live? www.pptlive.com
B Bill Dilworth Nov 29, 2009 #3 Ellen just did a tutorial on this. I assume that is where you saw it. I don't know if she pulled it or I just can't find it. Either way, she does just what Glen suggested - Push Transitions on backgrounds with limited vertical elements. Bill Dilworth
Ellen just did a tutorial on this. I assume that is where you saw it. I don't know if she pulled it or I just can't find it. Either way, she does just what Glen suggested - Push Transitions on backgrounds with limited vertical elements. Bill Dilworth
A Alan Cohen Oct 15, 2010 #4 I have read the advice below. Is there any way of producing a powerpoint and viewing it so it moves in a horizontal manner as opposed to vertically? thanks A Cohen
I have read the advice below. Is there any way of producing a powerpoint and viewing it so it moves in a horizontal manner as opposed to vertically? thanks A Cohen