PowerPoint for Office 365 for Mac, PowerPoint 2019 for Mac, PowerPoint 2016 for Mac. Place the shape so the text is where you want it. Your slide now looks something like this The shape should look similar to the following illustration. Under Shape Styles, click Fill, and then click No Fill.
I do a lot of presentations in my classes and while I PowerPoint gets the job done, I'm considering moving over to Keynote to stand out from my colleagues. The problem lies in presenting from the Windows only environment at my college. I'm wondering if it is possible to log into iCloud on the Windows system and present through the iCloud interface? Will all of formatting crossover? Is there a full screen presentation view (similar to the 'Slide Show' view in PowerPoint) that is accessible via iCloud?
Thanks in advance to all who reply. Some of these answers have truth to them, but do not answer your question directly. Although there is no Keynote application program for Windows, you can in fact present a Keynote presentation through any up to date browser (including Internet Explorer/Chrome/Firefox/Safari on Windows) on iCloud.com via Keynote for iCloud. Just login, open your presentation, and click the p lay button!
However, the experience is in my opinion not ideal. Local fonts won't carry over and many transitions and animations, the very ones that make for a premium experience, simply don't work that well or don't work at all. More information can be found here: In the end of the day, I would push for physically bringing a Mac to your classroom - whether it's personal or from your college's IT department.
In my experience most classrooms have VGA connections that allow you to connect. Some of these answers have truth to them, but do not answer your question directly. Although there is no Keynote application program for Windows, you can in fact present a Keynote presentation through any up to date browser (including Internet Explorer/Chrome/Firefox/Safari on Windows) on iCloud.com via Keynote for iCloud. Just login, open your presentation, and click the p lay button!
However, the experience is in my opinion not ideal. Local fonts won't carry over and many transitions and animations, the very ones that make for a premium experience, simply don't work that well or don't work at all. More information can be found here: In the end of the day, I would push for physically bringing a Mac to your classroom - whether it's personal or from your college's IT department. In my experience most classrooms have VGA connections that allow you to connect. I needed to share a 1Mb, 20 slides Keynote on a shared server.
PDF export was 57Mb, PPT was 27Mb (and several format changes, especially fonts). Quicktime export is 19Mb. Finally I exported everything as images (1.6Mb), then inserted the images one by one into a blank PPT (I also have MSOffice on the Mac), final size 1.6Mb (no overhead filesize). Of course forget about transitions and other effects.
If you're in a hurry and the presentation is not fancy, just zipping those images to view them with a standard image viewer works, and fits within acceptable size conversion limits. Overall, as a new Mac user, sharing Keynote content with Windows users does not strike me as convenient. A viewer for Windows would indeed be desirable. Well size was the issue for PDF, PPT is still too big and not WYSIWYG (font issues, as Mac fonts are called in and replaced by the nearest font), Quicktime too big still. I mean respectively 57, 27 or 19 Mb for a 1.5Mb original file! And no, I cannot use iWork for iCloud, this is corporate content which cannot leave the company's network.
I am wondering what the resolution for PDF export is in dpi. Considering that the image on the projector or someone else's screen will only typically reach 92 dpi (not sure what my Mac's screen size is in pixels, the typical PC screen is 1400-1600 something wide), print 150dpi (full page print), rasterizing need not go higher than this to be efficient; most presentation paper printouts are done half page so even 75dpi could still do the trick. Maybe the fonts are 'convert to curves' instead of a more efficient 'include fonts as subset'. My presentation used a template from Keynote with a repeated image, I assume Keynote ('Exhibition') so I suppose Keynote internally reuses the image and thus keeps the size low. Adobe InDesign offers many options to tweak PDF export, but as PDF does not support animations either, I would say my best workaround is export to images (all font issues solved, perfect WYSIWYG), play images from the image folder, and zip the images to a single file if I need to share it on a file server. Windows or Linux users are also covered (I was not thinking about the penguins at first but it also works for them so everyone is happy. Apple Footer.
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