You can do this two ways:
1. FOR PEOPLE WITH POWERPOINT 2010 and
2. FOR PEOPLE WITH POWERPOINT 2007, 2003 OR LOWER
1. For people with Microsft Office PowerPoint 2010 click on the red 'file' button, then click on 'save and send'. When you're in the save and send tab click on 'create a video' at the bottom of the list. Choose your settings (on the right of the page, you'll know what I mean when you do it!) and then click 'create video'. Wait a while (it takes quite a time to do) and then it makes a copy of your whole presentation and converts it into a Windows Media video file type. To get it onto a disc from there simply put a writable DVD in the drive and 'burn' option will comeup. You'll be able to play it on most DVD players (I tried it on people and 2/3 people could watch it on there DVD players at home!).
2. I'm sure if you Google you'll find lots of programs which will help you (you WILL) but watch out! There's schammers out there!
(Sorry if this didn't help!)
Copy and paste
It is for viewing Powerpoint presentations. If someone does not have Powerpoint, they can use it to view presentations. It cannot be used to create or edit presentations. That can only be done with Powerpoint.
They have to have the required codecs to work. Most likely has to be in .mp4 or .flv format.
PowerPoint can prepare lectures and presentations by helping instructors refine their material to salient points and content. Class lectures can be typed in outline format, then refined as slides. SlideEgg offers attractive PowerPoint templates for your creative presentations. Visit the SlideEgg category page!
what are the four principles for creating effective text presentations in Microsoft PowerPoint
OpenOffice or LibreOffice can open PowerPoint presentations.
color
Microsoft Office for Macs includes PowerPoint for the creation of a presentations. Microsoft also provide a viewer with which Mac users can view PowerPoint presentations without owning PowerPoint itself. Apple's own KeyNote software can save presentations as a PowerPoint file.
maybe try a trivia PowerPoint on a movie or book.
Yes. PowerPoint 2007 (and 2010) support loading presentations that were made in older PowerPoint version.
slides shows
Yes, of course.