PowerPoint 2007 is one of the Office 2007 applications that supports the new next-generation Office interface, complete with the new Ribbon layout and interactive galleries. Most of the functionality ...
Such wise improvements for an application would be great spotlight, but Microsoft's totally new Office format (OOXML) for PowerPoint 2007 is not that satisfied to ensure widest compatibility of files.
Part of the Microsoft Office 2007 Suite, PowerPoint 2007 allows you to create dynamic, animated presentations in the form of digital slide shows. Slides containing text, charts, graphs, sounds and ...
PowerPoint users, your world has changed. The newest version, PowerPoint 2007, features the most thorough changes since the program’s birth. This is good news. PowerPoint’s new look is more than just ...
Microsoft Office 2007 offers the flexibility to export data between programs, such as sending content from a PowerPoint slide presentation to a Word document. This Word document can generate handouts ...
Our look at changes, good and bad, to major components in Microsoft Office 2007 continues with a look at PowerPoint 2007, the latest version of the popular business presentation program. In the other ...
Microsoft is spicing up PowerPoint with new templates, animation effects, and image-editing tools. The interface of the 2007 beta 2 displays icons of features organized within a tabbed Ribbon atop the ...
Reader Bill has a number of really old (circa 1991) https://www.pcworld.com/tags/Microsoft+PowerPoint.html files that he wants to open in Office 2007. Unfortunately ...
Our collective attention span seems to be getting shorter these days. We don't have time to hear every minute detail about a new application. We want to hear "just the facts." Tell us what's new, tell ...
As Microsoft inches closer to the forthcoming public beta release of Office 2007 sometime this summer, beta 2 is now being distributed worldwide in 5 different languages—English, Spanish, German, ...
Dennis O'Reilly began writing about workplace technology as an editor for Ziff-Davis' Computer Select, back when CDs were new-fangled, and IBM's PC XT was wowing the crowds at Comdex. He spent more ...