Microsoft PowerPoint is widely used by people. You may use it to create company profiles, informative presentations, presentations on your products or service. Have you ever imagined transferring them to DVD for viewing PowerPoint presentations on TV sets? Thus, you can:1. Distribute the DVD copies that contained company profile out to potential and existing customers to avoid printing them. 2. Display the informative presentation on TV for waiting room, lobby or foyer. 3. Make in-housing DVD advertising slideshow for your menu board of your restaurant, nightclub, ice cream store, or hot books in your bookstore, and so on. Then, how can we view PowerPoint on TV? The method to view PowerPoint on standard TV is different from the method to view PPT through Apple TV. View PowerPoint on stand TV with DVD playerTo play PowerPoint presentation on TV, you need to choose a solution to save your PowerPoint presentation to DVD. One time-effective method is to use an all-in-one PPT to DVD converter that retains all subtleties in the original PowerPoint, such as animations, transitions, sounds, video clips, and even hyperlinks between slides!You can find a convert tool from Google “PowerPoint to DVD”. PPT2DVD is recommended. Moreover, it is an easy-to-use utility could burn your PPT into blank DVD disc so that you could watch PPT on TV or other media player without a computer. Follow the steps to convert PowerPoint to DVD:Step 1: Download and install PPT2DVD converter. Start it and mount an empty DVD disc. Step2: Choose Standard DVD as the output choice. Step3: Import PowerPoint presentation with PPT, PPTX, PPS, PPSX entensions, which you want to save to DVD. You can import up to 12 files at one time. Step4: Do choose the right TV standard and leave other advanced settings as default for the first testing. Step5: Choose the right DVD menu theme you want or customize it. Step6: Tick Burn to Disc and click Start the converting and burning process. After conversion and burning, you can play your PowerPoint presentations with PPT, PPTX, PPS, PPSX extensions on TV through DVD player. Obviously, this is a time-effective and easy-to-use method for viewing PowerPoint on TV. Anyway, DVD player is very cheap, at the some time; it is convenient for distribution after burning PowerPoint to DVD. Watch PowerPoint on TV via Apple TVApple TV is a network device that allows consumers to use an HDTV set to view photos, play music and watch video that originates from an Internet media service or a local network. When you want to watch PowerPoint on TV via Apple TV, you should follow these operations:Step 1: Convert PowerPoint to certain Video formats like MP4 that can accepted by iTunes and sync. You can use this tool PowerPoint to Apple TV. You can also use PPT2DVD converter or PPT to Video converter help you convert the certain format that can accepted by Apple TV. Step 2: Upload the video to iTunes and sync to Apple TV, then you can watch you presentation on you HDTV. Further benefits to view PPT on TV• Show presentations with everybody without a computer. • Share your slideshows to others widely and freely, because TV sets and DVD player are very popular. • Prevent your presentations be modified by others. • Preserve your slideshows for a long timeAfter using these methods, we can distribute the company profile with DVD copies, display the informative presentation on TV in waiting room, lobby or foyer, and make in-housing DVD advertising slideshow easily. Actually, by saving PowerPoint to DVD, you can also create training DVD, annual report, and photo slideshow and so on.
Posts Tagged ‘Standard Tv’
Extremely Large And Extremely Small Televisions
December 17th, 2009For the last 5 or 6 years the media (and therefore also the public) has focused either the huge television sets or the extremely small televisions that can be carried around in your pocket. On the tiny end of the scale you have the portable players with 2-4 inch screens that can pack enormous amounts of video into a piece of hardware the size of a wallet or even a credit card. On the other end of the spectrum there are the large HDTVs where anything smaller than 42 inches isn’t even worth talking or writing about if you ask much of the popular media. You are sometimes left wondering if there’s still anything in between these two extremes – while both of these types of technology are impressive nonetheless. Finding a normal television with a 4:3 aspect ratio in a similar size between twenty to thirty inches is actually becoming more and more difficult. That is unless you are then compensation by going for digital televisions like LCD screens or plasma screens. The most significant difference between the TV’s that are available today and those that were available ten years ago is the fact that modern standard definition television sets typically have digital tuners built in. The TV manufacturers are preparing for the change to digital television (planned for 2009) even though it’s unclear whether or not it will actually happen on schedule. There is a bigger question than whether or not standard TV sets are still available. There are many arguments against investing in a standard definition television right now and the most obvious argument against getting one is the fact that more and more TV shows are being produced in the HDTV format. Secondly many TV distributors are preparing to offer more HDTV channels over the next couple of years. As the popularity and availability of HDTV programming increases, we are likely to see a great (and expanding) effect in the number of TV channels and TV shows that will change to High Definition Television. The more channels and programs that make the switch, the more people will watch the programs on these channels and the public will begin to ask questions why the rest of the channels haven’t also made the switch to HDTV and will put pressure on them to do so. This is not to say that standard definition TV will be nonexistent in the future. But it is more likely that the TV programs and shows that are produced in the High Def format will be “down converted” to standard definition format and be shown on standard definition television channels, at least for some years to come. This is actually already happening to some extent as it was seen in the most recent Star Trek series which was shot in high definition. Because this was still a very popular show for people to watch on normal standard definition channels and while it originally aired in standard definition a lot of its fans probably didn’t even realize that it had actually been shot in HD. This brings us to another of the many advantages of HDTV sets – Even if you are not watching HDTV on it, there’s an increasing trend to broadcast normal television shows in the wide screen format that looks good on HDTV screens.
Understanding HDTV Resolution And What It Means For You
December 16th, 2009HDTV is a vastly improved method of broadcasting television shows and watching entertainment media. It is a byproduct of the digital age in electronics. By converting the picture and sound in digital format, great improvements have been made in the quality of the viewing experience in recent years. We are now able to watch digitally produced movies and programs by DVD and enjoy a much richer picture quality and sound that can even begin to rival movie theaters, however on a much smaller scale.
There are actually several improvements to TV viewing that have been made available in the HDTV standard and perhaps the most obvious is the display itself. Older televisions could only display a TV picture that consisted of 525 lines on the screen. Each line had about 500 pixels of information to show, so that basically adds up to 525 X 500 resolution. Just think on the fact that the most basic of computer displays operate at 640 X 480 resolution and you can begin to see why such an antiquated technology for television viewing needed to be changed.
But there have been even more improvements to the resolution factor in HDTV. Consider that standard televisions may have had 525 lines of information to display on the screen but they usually displayed that information on every other line at a time. Every 1/60 of a second it would display first all of the even numbered lines on the screen, and then change to display the odd numbered lines. And this happens over and over again. Because it happens so fast, your brain makes the adjustment for the alternating information and assembles the picture as one piece. This process is called interlacing in standard TV.
In HDTV the number of lines displayed on the screen is greatly enhanced, up to 1080 instead of 525, and the number of pixels on the sreen is up to 10X the number of those found in standard television. In addition, there are many HDTV monitors that can display every line on the screen every 1/60 of a second without interlacing them at all, and this is called “progressive scan”. So adding it up, you can have up to 10 times the resolution being displayed in a much smoother viewing format. It’s very easy then, to see why so many people are favorably impressed when they see the real capabilities of a broadcast or show being displayed on a high quality HDTV television set. As broadcasting in HDTV format becomes widely adopted in the near future, you will truly wonder how you ever watched television without it.
By: Jim Johnson