Not that I've ever heard. That would be a bad business decision for Microsoft. What would be their incentive to develop such programs?
MICROSOFT 2007
Open Office Impress is basically a free version of Microsoft PowerPoint.
No.
No, Microsoft 2010 is not free it can run you $150 dollars - $500 dollarsMicrosoft Office Home and Student - $150 (Including Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote)Microsoft Office Home and Business - $280 (Including Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook and OneNoteMicrosoft Office Professional - $500 (Including Word, Excel, PowerPoint,
Microsoft PowerPoint can be found when you purchase the Microsoft Office suite. A free alternative, OpenOffice Impress, is part of the OpenOffice suite.
You may be able to find a demo version from the Microsoft website. Power point is a licensed program from Microsoft and is not normally available for free. It is a component of Microsoft Office.
The best place to obtain a download of Powerpoint 2007 would be from the Microsoft website itself. There is a free version to download available here.
The program Microsoft Office 2007 is not free to download for Microsoft customers. You will have to pay the upgrade fee after the provided trial period.
Free templates for Microsoft Office computer software can be located and directly downloaded from the official Microsoft Office website. Templates are available for Microsoft Word, Excel, Powerpoint, Publisher, and Visio.
Since Office 2010 is still in Beta, Microsoft has not released a viewer for PowerPoint 2010 yet. However, you should be able to view with the PoserPoint 2007 viewer. See related links for free download.
You can't get it for free, but you may consider free alternatives. If you are used to the interface of powerpoint, you can try kingsoft presentation 2012, which has a similar interface with powerpoint 2007, but can almost do everything that powerpoint does. See: http://www.kingsoftstore.com/presentation-free.html
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.