powerpoint into publisher

D

David Schwalje

I need to get a MS Powerpoint presentation into MS
Publisher. I only have the Powerpoint "viewer". The reason
I need to get it into Publisher is so I can do some simple
editing and also lighten up some of the colors. Bottle of
wine to anyone who can help me out this weekend. Thank you.
 
J

JL Amerson

Ooh - doesn't that sond like an offer one cannot refuse! So what kind of
wine are you offering? Boones Farm Strawberry Ripple or something made froma
real fruit? ;-)
 
°

°°°MS°Publisher°°°

I would have gladly helped you, but I don't have PowerPoint installed.

Bit far to send the bottle of wine, but I would have gladly done it for you
as a favour if I had PowerPoint installed.

Thankfully boring PowerPoint displays have just about disappeared these days
from conferences. It got to the stage if I saw another PowerPoint display I
felt like screaming.

--
 
°

°°°MS°Publisher°°°

JoAnn hmmmm yes, there is an organic Strawberry winery not far from where I
live, and yes, it is absolutely magnificent.
Across the road from the Strawberry winery is an organic Peach Schnapps
producer. Fortunately there is a beautiful river where we can camp
overnight, and walk briskly up the road to these two places - and stagger
back slowly in the afternoon LOL

--
 
J

JL Amerson

Now that sounds quite nice.

(You may not be aware the Boornes Farm Strawberry Ripple" was the cheapest,
rankest wine that was ever created. It's what most of us Baby Boomers got a
buzz from in the early 70's. Preferably after it sat in your best friend's
VW Beetle for several days. Brings back some naaaaaaaaaaasty memories!)
 
E

Ed Bennett

After managing to set up OE-QuoteFix on his new PC, Ed reads a message
from David Schwalje said:
I need to get a MS Powerpoint presentation into MS
Publisher. I only have the Powerpoint "viewer". The reason
I need to get it into Publisher is so I can do some simple
editing and also lighten up some of the colors.

I could convert this for you, depending on the filesize and your version of
Publisher.
But the file will be a Publisher file and not a PowerPoint presentation
(i.e. you'll have to convert it back over)
 
E

Ed Bennett

After managing to set up OE-QuoteFix on his new PC, Ed reads a message
from °°°MS°Publisher°°° said:
Ed, you are to damn old to be drinking wine.

Do you mean "too damn old"?
 
E

Ed Bennett

After managing to set up OE-QuoteFix on his new PC, Ed reads a message
from JL Amerson said:
Hey wait - Ed, are you old enough to legally drink that wine???

That depends when/where I'm drinking it
:)
 
J

JL Amerson

And if your mom and dad are anywhere nearby?? I'm telling on you!!!

Love - Your psuedo-cyber Mom
 
M

Mike Koewler

JL,

Actually, Boone's Farm seemed to taste okay, at least at that time.
Maybe because of nothing to compare it to, though Dad used to make some
darn good blackberry and grape wine, while his cousin was an expert in
Dandelion Wine making.

Our drink of choice - well, at least the one we drank more than
frequently than anything else was Little King Cream Ale - a Cincinnati
product. Came in 8 ounce bottles, 8 to a pack, and was extremely cheap.

What more could a teen ask for. :)

Mike

JL said:
Now that sounds quite nice.

(You may not be aware the Boornes Farm Strawberry Ripple" was the cheapest,
rankest wine that was ever created. It's what most of us Baby Boomers got a
buzz from in the early 70's. Preferably after it sat in your best friend's
VW Beetle for several days. Brings back some naaaaaaaaaaasty memories!)
 
J

JL Amerson

Sure - at that time it did. But we were 18 and it was 1974. We paid all of
95¢ for a bottle of that stuff. And considering gas was only about 35¢ a
gallon, we could buy a tank of gas, a bottle of wine, and ride the circuit
until midnight or maybe even 1 a.m.

Sometimes I miss the simpler times - but I certainly do NOT want to go back.

Mike Koewler said:
JL,

Actually, Boone's Farm seemed to taste okay, at least at that time.
Maybe because of nothing to compare it to, though Dad used to make some
darn good blackberry and grape wine, while his cousin was an expert in
Dandelion Wine making.

Our drink of choice - well, at least the one we drank more than
frequently than anything else was Little King Cream Ale - a Cincinnati
product. Came in 8 ounce bottles, 8 to a pack, and was extremely cheap.

What more could a teen ask for. :)

Mike
 

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