This is the only book that will help an intermediate PowerPoint user improve their skills to an advanced level. In doing so, they can benefit both professionally and personally. This is not a comprehensive book that will bore you with every detail of PowerPoint, but a guide to specific actions you can take to create the ultimate presentation. The book covers the powerful formatting engine new to PowerPoint 2007, and how it can be used for applying soft shadows, reflection, and glows to make a presentation look attractive. It also covers PowerPoint's new 3D engine. The book goes into deep technical detail about the Office 2007 theme engine and how color schemes, effect schemes, and font schemes work; as well as the new PowerPoint XML file format, showing you how to edit PowerPoint files without using PowerPoint at all. The authors walk through programming a macro and explain how to format shapes, diagrams, charts, text, tables with gradient and picture fills and different kinds of lines (e.g. a beveled compound line with a diamond arrowhead). Also covered are those all important slide show shortcuts that few people know about like -- seeing your private notes while presenting on a projector, starting the slide show from the current slide without fumbling through the user interface, and how to black out the slide show screen with one key press.
Customer Reviews:
Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 / 5.0
Decent book with many problems:
I bought this book based on the positive reviews on Amazon. I am less enthusiastic about the book. Although I have learned a few things from reading this short book, many shortcomings prevent it from receiving five stars: 1. Bad labels - Rather than titling a paragraph based on the technique's benefit, titles often are meaningless catch phrases: "Smart Art: What is so Smart about it?" As a reference book, I want titles labeled as benefits so I can quickly find what I am looking for. 2. Excessive... more info
Good for young professionals:
The company I work for installed the new office and when I first started using it I couldn't find anything. I went through a few Powerpoint books and found this one to have the best explanations. It covers just about everything I need, making a deck look impressive.
Great Reference Guide for PowerPoint 2007:
To be honest, I've always been jealous of PowerPoints that I see during company meetings. How do they make them look so good? Finally, I decided to invest a little time. My friend's friend works at Microsoft and told me that his co-workers wrote a book. I figured I would give it a shot. Surprisingly, I actually enjoyed the book. I thought it would be really complicated, but little things go a long way to make slides look good and this book is great at pointing those out. Now, my presentations look clean,... more info
Good as a tutorial or as a reference:
Chock full of good ideas and helpful hints. The examples are really illuminating and the writing is exceptionally clear, especially the section on the XML format (which was what I was most interested in). In both business and academic settings I've found myself having to maintain a large number of presentations. Often there are slight variations between presentations (different customer, different conference) and this book helped me streamline a lot of that process. For instance, now I can easily update... more info
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