The answer Is multi-media
multimedia
One may insert a sound by attaching it to a slide transition, in which case you open the drop down menu in the Transitions ribbon in the timing section, or you can insert a sound from file by going to the insert ribbon and clicking on the audio drop down menu under the media section. From there it will give you the option of recording audio there, if you want, using some standard sounds built in to PowerPoint, and using one from file, if using one from file, click on that option, and browse for the audio file you want to use. However use caution if you are putting the PowerPoint on a flash drive or other mobile saving card, because if you don't have a copy of the sound on your mobile data storage unit then the PowerPoint will look for the sound on your computer, and not find it. It will therefore error and not play the sound. If you want the sound to play you should copy it to the mobile drive and attach the audio file to the PowerPoint from the drive copy, not the computer original, because if you link the computer copy, then PowerPoint will still look for it on your computer, but if you link the mobile copy, it will look on the mobile drive, and of course, if done right, play the sound.
If the program you want the sound to be cut off on has a mute option, try muting the sound on just that program.
Odds are, you linked the music on the PowerPoint to a file on your computer. To fix this, save your music to the same device the PowerPoint will be saved to and when you insert music, don't find the music on the hard drive, find it on the flash drive and it should work. Reason: Sound files in wav format larger than 100 KB (i.e. anything but a short sound effect) and other file formats are linked to PowerPoint presentation, when you Email the PowerPoint presentation, the linked music will not be shown. The differences between embed and link, please view: http://office.Microsoft.com/en-us/PowerPoint/HA012303071033.aspx Solution 1: 1. Put the sound files and the PowerPoint presentation in a same folder. 2. Reinsert the sound file to the PowerPoint presentation. 3. Package the entire folder into one archive file and send it to other computer Solution 2 - embed the music: For wav sound larger than 100KB: PowerPoint-> Tools->Options-> Advanced -> link sounds with file size greater than ...KB. Please input 50000. For music in all formats:
Powerpoint is a presentation software developed by Microsoft that enables users to create dynamic and visually appealing slideshows for various purposes such as business presentations, educational purposes, and more. It allows users to incorporate text, images, videos, and animations to effectively deliver information to an audience.
Sound Redorder, which comes with the computer, has very poor sound Quality. Try using a different program.
Recording is the act of, well, recording full motion images and sound and storing them. You could do this with a webcam. Also, rendering is the act of creating the videos after editing them in a video editing program. Maybe that is the word you are looking for?
Output is like, if you print something, the information on the paper is output. If you are listening to music on the computer, the sound is output. If you are watching a movie, the actions, the images, and the sound is output. In other words, output is something the computer provides for you.
it depends on wat program ur using.
microsoft powerpoint
You can edit the sound and amplify certain frequencies, but if your speakers cannot produce those frequencies you are lacking, there is no program that will compensate. I would look to upgrade your speaker first, and then determine what is lacking in the sound.
You will have to be more specific as to what happened and what brand of computer you have. If you reinstalled windows, you will have to use the disk that came with your computer to install the sound card drivers. If you dont have a disk, go to the manufacturer's website and search for them.
John J. Anderson has written: 'Commodore 64 sight & sound' -- subject(s): BASIC (Computer program language), Commodore 64 (Computer), Computer graphics, Computer sound processing, Programming