About PowerPoint presentation to DVD and Play on TV

M

master

Try to use PowerPoint2DVD on http://www.powerpoint-to-dvd.com

PowerPoint2DVD can burn your PowerPoint slideshows onto DVD or miniDVD,
including your background music and inner links. For example, if your
PowerPoint has several subcategories, each ones open a different slide
show when you click on it, the software will keep the links like a DVD
movie does, you can remote to select the different categories easily by
your DVD controler.

Any questions please visit the website or email to
(e-mail address removed)

------------------
Although, I see some people (almost from the Microsoft MVP members with
various name) posted articles in groups and their sites, try to
persuade people not to use PowerPoint2DVD, for some problems it may
has, etc. Well, I'm not angry with that, we are still confident with
the product, because we have so many customers, it does work and help
them that is the biggest encouragement for us to go on. We don't
disavow that each program may have a little bugs, ours is not different
neither, like some burning issues, there are too many factors should be
considered in, and maybe the problem is not related to the software,
but your devices or settings. No matter what, we will try our best to
help you, we want to offer you the most satisfying tech-support and
customer services, besides that, if you still not satisfied with the
product, we make sure that we will not be hesitate to refund all your
money back if you purchased. We have received many gladness from users,
and that's saying a lot.
 
B

Bill Dilworth

I tried it, it broke.

Your program locked up my computer. I had to literally pull the plug
because it was locked so badly that I could not even ctl+alt+del. I tried
it again, locked up my system again. On the 5th try, after stripping my
system down to the bones and disabling everything not operation critical, I
got it to make a run without crashing my system. My system is 2 GHz -512
Ram -160 GB, so is not cutting edge, but also not a dog. At the time of my
testing my system was 1) recently defragmented, 2) recently culled of temp
files, 3)virus free, and 4) not connected to the net in order to allow for
5) the virus scanning to be turned off.

I had made a simple 6 slide trial presentation in under 5 minutes. No
video, no sound, just 3 jpg pictures, text, and animations. The Video
Output from your program was poor ... well ... that's far too generous -- it
was horrible. (I admit, I never burned your video output to a DVD, but I
figured, "Why waste a perfectly good DVD disk?") The output to the hdd
could hardly improve enough in the transfer to a DVD to merit the waste of
electricity required to burn it. I think your software managed to capture a
little less than 1 frame per second while the system was manipulating
graphics, perhaps double that while the CPU was not busy. Slow fades didn't
fade, they clunked thru 2 mid stages. Motion animations jumped half a
screen per capture, some were not captured at all. Text animations were cut
short or not captured at all. I would be embarrassed to show the output to
any client of mine, and trust me, they are the forgiving sort.

Do I think users should try your software? Sure, why not. The trial is
free and if they have time, bandwidth to spare, nothing to do for a day or
two, and want an 'adventure'; than I say, "go for it." However, if they are
looking for something that works right now, I don't feel right about
pointing them to something that I feel will waste their time and probably
not fulfill their need.

Don't misunderstand me. Nothing would make me happier than to have a
feature, like you are attempting, become available to PowerPoint users. I
just don't think your product achieves what was attempted.

Are the MVP's picking on you? I don't think so. If I may venture a general
opinion for all the regulars on the NG (both MVP's and non), we do take our
passion for helping others seriously. We try programs so we can see how
well they work, and how they might be used by PowerPoint users. We then
offer our suggestions and recommendations, whenever the topic is brought up
by a real poster to the NG, based on our personal experiences. Keep in mind
that MVP is a honorary title and does not carry any salary; we volunteer do
this because we like to help people.

If anyone has an opinions or experiences that differ from mine, they are
always welcome to post it.

--

Bill Dilworth
Microsoft PPT MVP Team
===============
Please spend a few minutes checking vestprog2@
out www.pptfaq.com This link will yahoo.
answer most of our questions, before com
you think to ask them.

Change org to com to defuse anti-spam,
ant-virus, anti-nuisance misdirection.
..
..
 
B

Bill Foley

In addition to Bill's opinions, mine is quite simple:

This is a place to post questions on how to use PowerPoint. This is NOT a
place to advertise your product (whether it works great or not)! PERIOD!
Also, nothing will give you worse reviews than posting your own "ghost"
questions just so you can answer your own posts with "use our program"!
 
D

David M. Marcovitz

What Bill said except:

If the product actually works and actually is the answer to a real
poster's question, then I would say that it is OK to post it in that
context. If the product does not work or is not the answer to a real
poster's question, then, as Bill said most eloquently in his email
address: "Eat Spam and Die."

--David

--
David M. Marcovitz
Director of Graduate Programs in Educational Technology
Loyola College in Maryland
Author of _Powerful PowerPoint for Educators_
http://www.loyola.edu/education/PowerfulPowerPoint/
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top