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Microsoft Powerpoint 

Microsoft Office PowerPoint
Microsoft Office PowerPoint Logo

Microsoft PowerPoint 2007 in Windows Vista.
Developed by Microsoft
Latest release 12.0.6211.1000 (2007 SP1) / December 11, 2007
OS Microsoft Windows
Type Presentation
License Proprietary
Website Microsoft Office PowerPoint
Microsoft PowerPoint (Mac OS X)

Microsoft PowerPoint:Mac 2008 running on Mac OS X 10.5.
Developed by Microsoft
Latest release 12.1.1 Build 080522 (2008) / January 15, 2008
OS Mac OS X
Type Presentation
License Proprietary
Website Microsoft PowerPoint: Mac 2008

Microsoft PowerPoint is a proprietary presentation program developed by Microsoft. It is part of the Microsoft Office system, and runs on Microsoft Windows and the Mac OS computer operating systems. The Windows version can run in Linux operating system, under the Wine compatibility layer.

PowerPoint is widely used by business people, educators, students, and trainers and is among the most prevalent forms of persuasive technology. Beginning with Microsoft Office 2003, Microsoft revised the branding to emphasize PowerPoint's place within the office suite, calling it Microsoft Office PowerPoint instead of just Microsoft PowerPoint. The current versions are Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007 for Windows and 2008 for Mac.

Contents

History

Microsoft Office PowerPoint was originally developed by Bob Gasking and software developer Dennis Austin under the name Presenter for Forethought.[1]

Forethought released PowerPoint 1.0 for the Apple Macintosh in April 1987. It ran in black and white, generating text-and-graphics pages for overhead transparencies. A new full-color version of PowerPoint shipped a year later after the first color Macintosh came to market.

Microsoft Corporation purchased Forethought and its PowerPoint software product for $14 million on July 31, 1987.[2] In 1990 the first Windows versions were produced for Windows 3.0. Since 1990, PowerPoint has been included in Microsoft Office suite of applications -- except for the Basic Editions of the suite.

Operation

PowerPoint presentations consist a number of individual pages or "slides". The "slide" analogy is a reference to the slide projector, a device that has become somewhat obsolete due to the use of PowerPoint and other presentation software.

Slides may contain text, graphics, movies, and other objects, which may be arranged freely on the slide. PowerPoint, however, facilitates the use of a consistent style in a presentation using a template or "Slide Master".

The presentation can be printed or displayed live on a computer and navigated through at the command of the presenter. For larger audiences the computer display is often projected using a video projector. Slides can also form the basis of webcasts.

PowerPoint provides three types of movements:

  1. Entrance, emphasis, and exit of elements on a slide itself are controlled by what PowerPoint calls Custom Animations
  2. Transitions, on the other hand are movements between slides. These can be animated in a variety of ways
  3. Custom animation can be used to create small story boards by animating pictures to enter, exit or move

With callouts, speech bubbles with edited text can be sent on and off to create speech. The overall design of a presentation can be controlled with a master slide; and the overall structure, extending to the text on each slide, can be edited using a primitive outliner.

Presentations can be saved and run in any of the file formats: the default .ppt (presentation), .pps (PowerPoint Show) or .pot (template). In PowerPoint 2007 and Mac OS X 2008 versions, the XML-based file formats .pptx, .ppsx and .potx have been introduced, along with the macro-enabled file formats .pptm, .potm, .ppsm.

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Cultural effects

Supporters and critics generally agree[3][4][5] that the ease of use of presentation software can save a lot of time for people who otherwise would have used other types of visual aid—hand-drawn or mechanically typeset slides, blackboards or whiteboards, or overhead projections. Ease of use also encourages those who otherwise would not have used visual aids, or would not have given a presentation at all, to make presentations. As PowerPoint's style, animation, and multimedia abilities have become more sophisticated, and as the application has generally made it easier to produce presentations (even to the point of having an "AutoContent Wizard" suggesting a structure for a presentation), the difference in needs and desires of presenters and audiences has become more noticeable.

File formats

PowerPoint Presentation
Filename extension .ppt
Internet media type application/vnd.ms-powerpoint
Uniform Type Identifier com.microsoft.powerpoint.​ppt[6]
Developed by Microsoft
Type of format Presentation

The binary format specification has been available from Microsoft on request but since February 2008 the .ppt format specification can be freely downloaded and implemented under the Microsoft Open Specification Promise patent licensing.[7]

In Microsoft Office 2007 the binary file formats were replaced as the default format by the new XML based Office Open XML formats, which are published as an open standard.

See also

Office PowerPoint 2003
Office PowerPoint 2003
Microsoft PowerPoint 2000 running under Windows 2000
Microsoft PowerPoint 2000 running under Windows 2000
The about box for PowerPoint 1.0, with an empty document in the background.
The about box for PowerPoint 1.0, with an empty document in the background.
Wikibooks
Wikibooks has a book on the topic of

References

External links

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