Click the Start button, then All Programs, and you may then have Microsoft Office on your list. In there you would find both Excel and Powerpoint. Click on the one you want to start it. They may even be directly on the All Programs list.
Click the Start button, then All Programs, and you may then have Microsoft Office on your list. In there you would find both Excel and Powerpoint. Click on the one you want to start it. They may even be directly on the All Programs list.
Click the Start button, then All Programs, and you may then have Microsoft Office on your list. In there you would find both Excel and Powerpoint. Click on the one you want to start it. They may even be directly on the All Programs list.
Click the Start button, then All Programs, and you may then have Microsoft Office on your list. In there you would find both Excel and Powerpoint. Click on the one you want to start it. They may even be directly on the All Programs list.
Click the Start button, then All Programs, and you may then have Microsoft Office on your list. In there you would find both Excel and Powerpoint. Click on the one you want to start it. They may even be directly on the All Programs list.
Click the Start button, then All Programs, and you may then have Microsoft Office on your list. In there you would find both Excel and Powerpoint. Click on the one you want to start it. They may even be directly on the All Programs list.
Click the Start button, then All Programs, and you may then have Microsoft Office on your list. In there you would find both Excel and Powerpoint. Click on the one you want to start it. They may even be directly on the All Programs list.
Click the Start button, then All Programs, and you may then have Microsoft Office on your list. In there you would find both Excel and Powerpoint. Click on the one you want to start it. They may even be directly on the All Programs list.
Click the Start button, then All Programs, and you may then have Microsoft Office on your list. In there you would find both Excel and Powerpoint. Click on the one you want to start it. They may even be directly on the All Programs list.
Click the Start button, then All Programs, and you may then have Microsoft Office on your list. In there you would find both Excel and Powerpoint. Click on the one you want to start it. They may even be directly on the All Programs list.
Click the Start button, then All Programs, and you may then have Microsoft Office on your list. In there you would find both Excel and Powerpoint. Click on the one you want to start it. They may even be directly on the All Programs list.
Click the Start button, then All Programs, and you may then have Microsoft Office on your list. In there you would find both Excel and Powerpoint. Click on the one you want to start it. They may even be directly on the All Programs list.
You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.You can put a link into a Powerpoint document that will open an Excel file in Excel.
Powerpoint is not designed to directly open Excel documents. Powerpoint can import spreadsheets and charts and you can copy data from Excel into Powerpoint. Powerpoint also has a built in feature for creating very simple spreadsheets and charts.
.ppt and Microsoft PowerPoint..xls and Microsoft Excel..pdf and Adobe Reader
If you want to open Word files, get Pages. If you want to open Excel spreadsheets, get Numbers. If you want to open Powerpoint presentations, get Keynote.
I have included a link from Microsoft on how to do this.
Go to File/Open and browse where you saved your file at. Remember you should have saved (in OpenOffice) in a format that Microsoft can read. Word: .doc, docx Excel: .xls; xlsx, PowerPoint: .pps; ppt; pptx
To draw a flow chart a person could use Microsoft Excel, Microsoft PowerPoint, or Microsoft Word. Open Office for Macintosh computers can be used to create flow charts as well.
PowerPoint files can be viewed on a Mac with Microsoft's PowerPoint, Apple's Keynote, Open Office and several PowerPoint viewers.
A PPT file is a Microsoft PowerPoint file. PowerPoint from Microsoft or Impress from LibreOffice would do.
PowerPoint is a paid-for program. You cannot download PowerPoint legally (other than some Microsoft student programs) You could try Google Docs, a free online app by Google that can open PowerPoint files, or Open Office, which includes Word and Excel clones for free.
It is the equivalent of Microsoft's 'Powerpoint' program.
To install Microsoft PowerPoint, you must purchase a digital download or a copy of the Microsoft Office CD. Once you have downloaded the file or inserted the CD into the DVD/CD compartment on your computer, the program will run and automatically install.