Gehört zu: Office
Siehe auch: LibreOffice
Präsentationen mit Microsoft PowerPoint (aus Wiki)
Web Links
PowerPoint Karaoke
See: PowerPoint Karaoke http://www.spiegel.de/netzwelt/web/0,1518,398488,00.html
The 10/20/30 Rule
Von meinem letzten Vortragsabend der Gesellschaft für Informatik: “The 10/20/30 Rule of Powerpoint” by Guy Kawasaki http://blog.guykawasaki.com/2005/12/the_102030_rule.html
Nach: Tammo Freese, Frank Westphal: Ruby on Rails (28.2.2008 HBT)
Introduction
‘PowerPoint’ is a popular computer-controlled presentation program for the Microsoft Windows and Apple Macintosh operating systems.
It is among the most prevalent forms of persuasion technology , with some 30 million presentations being made with it every day, according to Microsoft.
History
Although now a Microsoft product, PowerPoint was originally developed by Bob Gaskins, a former Berkeley Ph.D. student who envisioned an easy-to-use presentation program that would manipulate a string of single pages, or “slides”. In 1984 , Gaskins joined a failing Silicon Valley software firm called Forethought and hired a software developer, Dennis Austin. Their prototype program was called “Presenter”. Due to trademarking issues, its name was changed to PowerPoint. PowerPoint 1.0 was released in 1987 and was originally only available for the Apple Macintosh , and only in black-and-white. It generated text-and-graphics pages that a photocopier could turn into overhead transparencies.
Later in 1987 , Forethought and PowerPoint were purchased by Microsoft Corporation for a price of $14 million. In 1988 the first Windows and DOS version was produced. It has since been a standard part of Microsoft’s Office suite of tools.
Concept
In PowerPoint and other presentation software in general, objects such as images and text being placed on each slide retain their position regardless of other objects already placed. This approach is intuitive for beginning users. This differs from desktop publishing software, where the flow of text or images on the page may be affected by the images or other objects placed on the page.
Source: http://www.tutorgig.com/encyclopedia/getdefn.jsp?keywords=Microsoft_PowerPoint
Installation
- Definitive Software Library ID: MicrosoftOffice
- Name: Microsoft Powerpoint
- Version: 2000 SR-1 (9.0.3821)
- Hersteller/Bezugsquelle: Microsoft
- Installations-Ordner: D:\Programme\Microsoft Office\Office
- Konfigurations-Dateien:
- Systemvoraussetzungen: Win95 or higher
Version History (Windows)
PowerPoint ist Bestandteil von MicrosoftOffice.
Tabelle 1: Die Versioneshistorie von PowerPoint
Date | Version | Office Version | Platform |
1988 | PowerPoint 1 | ? | ? |
PowerPoint 2 | ? | ? | |
PowerPoint 3 | ? | ? | |
1994-10-01 | PowerPoint 4 | Office 4 | Win 3.x or higher |
1995-09-18 | PowerPoint 95 (PowerPoint 7) | Office 95 | Win95 or higher |
1997-01-05 | PowerPoint 97 (PowerPoint 8) | Office 97 | Win95 or higher |
1999-06-07 | PowerPoint 2000 (PowerPoint 9) | Office 2000 | Win95 or higher |
2001-05-31 | PowerPoint 2002 (PowerPoint 10) | Office XP | Win98 or higher |
2003-11-27 | PowerPoint 2003 | Office 2003 (Office 11) | Windows2000 |
2007-01-00 | PowerPoint 2007 | Windows XP or higher | |
2010-06-00 | PowerPoint 2010 | ||
2013-08-01 | PowerPoint 2013 | Windows XP or higher | |
Sources:
- http://www.monitor.ca/monitor/issues/vol3iss1/newstuff.html#304
- http://support.microsoft.com/gp/lifeprodp
— Main.DietrichKracht – 03 Apr 2004