When you insert slides using the Reuse Slides pane, the current presentation is referred to as the "destination presentation." This is the presentation into which you are inserting slides from another presentation, known as the "source presentation." The destination presentation will incorporate slides from the source, allowing for easy integration of content.
A simple way to insert slides from another presentation is to use the "Slides" pane in PowerPoint. You can access it by clicking on the "Home" tab, then selecting "New Slide" and choosing "Reuse Slides." This allows you to browse for another presentation and insert slides directly into your current presentation by simply clicking on them.
Keep source formatting check box in the Reuse Slides task pane.
You go to the Master Slide and insert your footer there. It will then be on all slides.
A slide sorter is a feature or tool that is used in presentation software. It displays all of the slides as thumbnails in the current presentation.
Each page of a PowerPoint Presentation is called a Slide A set of slides that you present to people in a group is called a Presentation
status bar
To link objects or slides, you can use the hyperlink feature available in presentation software like Microsoft PowerPoint or Google Slides. By selecting the object or text you want to link, you can insert a hyperlink that directs to another slide within the presentation or to an external URL. This allows for interactive navigation, enhancing the overall flow of the presentation.
You can easily print a PowerPoint presentation as well. You can go on the menu and can print the slides.
Handouts,Speaker's notes, outlines
To add saved images from your vacation to your presentation, you can use the "Insert" option in your presentation software (like PowerPoint or Google Slides). Select "Pictures" or "Images," then navigate to the location on your computer where the images are saved. Choose the desired images and click "Insert" to add them to your presentation.
Editing a presentation.
The predecessor to the computer applications for making presentations was a series of photographic slides in a slide tray. When assembled into a presentation, the collection of slides was called a 'deck', as in a deck of cards. The term is probably just a holdover term.