Multimedia Production

Lecture 1 Slide­based Presentation

Dr. Somsak Phattarasukol

Faculty of Management Science UDON THANI RAJABHAT UNIVERSITY

Slide-based presentation

● A presentation that displays information in the form of a slide show. – "Slide" is an analogy to a plastic sheet shown with an . – Slides can be arranged, displayed on-screen, web- casted and printed.

Source: Wikipedia.org Slide-based presentation

● A slide-based presentation program normally has three major functions: – An editor that allows text to be inserted and formatted, – A method for inserting and manipulating graphic images, and – A slide-show system to display the content.

Source: Wikipedia.org Slide-based presentation

Source: Wikipedia.org Slide-based presentation

● Some of the commonly-used slide-based programs are – Microsoft PowerPoint, – Apple Keynote, – LibreOffice Impress, and – .

Source: Wikipedia.org Microsoft PowerPoint

Source: Microsoft.com Microsoft PowerPoint

● PowerPoint is a presentation program officially launched on May 22, 1990 as a part of the suite.

● It is one of the most commonly-used presentation programs with ~95% of the presentation market share.

● It has been used at an estimated frequency of 350 times per second.

Source: Wikipedia.org Microsoft PowerPoint

● Versions for Microsoft Windows include: – 1990 PowerPoint 2.0 for Windows 3.0 – 1992 PowerPoint 3.0 for Windows 3.1 – 1993 PowerPoint 4.0 (Office 4.x) – 1995 PowerPoint for Windows 95 (version 7.0; Office 95) – 1997 PowerPoint 97 (version 8.0; Office 97) – 1999 PowerPoint 2000 (version 9.0; Office 2000)

Source: Wikipedia.org Microsoft PowerPoint

● Versions for Microsoft Windows include: – 2001 PowerPoint 2002 (version 10; Office XP) – 2003 Office PowerPoint 2003 (version 11; Office 2003) – 2007 Office PowerPoint 2007 (version 12; Office 2007) – 2010 PowerPoint 2010 (version 14; Office 2010) – 2013 PowerPoint 2013 (version 15; Office 2013)

Source: Wikipedia.org Microsoft PowerPoint

● Versions for the Mac OS include: – 1987 PowerPoint 1.0 for Mac OS classic – 1988 PowerPoint 2.0 for Mac OS classic – 1992 PowerPoint 3.0 for Mac OS classic – 1994 PowerPoint 4.0 for Mac OS classic – 1998 PowerPoint 98 (8.0) for Mac OS classic (Office 1998 for Mac) – 2000 PowerPoint 2001 (9.0) for Mac OS classic (Office 2001 for Mac)

Source: Wikipedia.org Microsoft PowerPoint

● Versions for the Mac OS include: – 2001 PowerPoint v. X (10.0) for Mac OS X (Office:Mac v. X) – 2004 PowerPoint 2004 (11.0) for Mac OS X (Office:Mac 2004) – 2008 PowerPoint 2008 (12.0) for Mac OS X (Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac) – 2010 PowerPoint 2011 (14.0) for Mac OS X (Microsoft Office 2011 for Mac)

Source: Wikipedia.org Microsoft PowerPoint

● Filename extension – .ppt, .pptx, .pps, or .ppsx

● File format – The .ppt is a binary format and its specification was publicly released in 2008. – In Microsoft Office 2007 the binary file formats were replaced by the new XML based-format – Office Open XML.

Source: Wikipedia.org Microsoft PowerPoint

● Problem: – Compatibility ● Solution: – Export a presentation as a Flash animation or PDF document. – PDF files are designed to be shared regardless of platform and most web browsers already have the plug- in to view Flash files.

Source: Wikipedia.org Apple Keynote

Source: Apple.com Keynote

● Keynote is a presentation program developed as a part of the iWork productivity suite by Apple.

● It began as a program for Apple CEO Steve Jobs to use in creating the presentations for Apple keynote events.

● In 2006 it was used for the presentation in Al Gore's film An Inconvenient Truth.

Source: Wikipedia.org Keynote

● In 2010 Apple announced a new version of Keynote for iPad with an all new touch interface.

● In 2013, Apple redesigned Keynote with version 6.0, and made it free for anyone with a new iOS device or a Mac .

Source: Wikipedia.org LibreOffice Impress

Source: LibreOffice.org LibreOffice Impress

● Impress is a presentation program resembling Microsoft PowerPoint developed as a part of LibreOffice by the not-for-profit organization – The Document Foundation.

● It is developed in the principles of allowing users to run, copy, distribute, study, change and improve the software in non-restrictive ways.

Source: LibreOffice.org Google Slides

Source: Google.com Google Slides

● Slides is a presentation program developed as a part of a free, web-based software office suite offered by Google within its Google Drive service.

● The program allows users to create and edit documents online while collaborating with other users in real-time.

Source: Wikipedia.org