Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Deduce
Deduce
Miss any of the tips in the video, or prefer a written version of these steps?
Check out the instructions below to find out more about how to reduce your
PowerPoint file size. Learn all about compression techniques and other ways
to quickly shrink your PowerPoint PPT file size down:
Often, I find myself pasting images into a presentation from all over the web,
on my computer, and using built-in graphics. As I'm doing this, I'm often
bringing large image files into my PowerPoint without thinking of the file size
implications on my PowerPoint file. That can make for a quick and fluid design
process, but will leave you with some cleanup needed.
Often, I find myself pasting images into a presentation from all over the web,
on my computer, and using built-in graphics. As I'm doing this, I'm often
bringing large image files into my PowerPoint without thinking of the file size
implications on my PowerPoint file. That can make for a quick and fluid design
process, but will leave you with some cleanup needed.
Often, I find myself pasting images into a presentation from all over the web,
on my computer, and using built-in graphics. As I'm doing this, I'm often
bringing large image files into my PowerPoint without thinking of the file size
implications on my PowerPoint file. That can make for a quick and fluid design
process, but will leave you with some cleanup needed.
Often, I find myself pasting images into a presentation from all over the web,
on my computer, and using built-in graphics. As I'm doing this, I'm often
bringing large image files into my PowerPoint without thinking of the file size
implications on my PowerPoint file. That can make for a quick and fluid design
process, but will leave you with some cleanup needed.
Often, I find myself pasting images into a presentation from all over the web,
on my computer, and using built-in graphics. As I'm doing this, I'm often
bringing large image files into my PowerPoint without thinking of the file size
implications on my PowerPoint file. That can make for a quick and fluid design
process, but will leave you with some cleanup needed.
Often, I find myself pasting images into a presentation from all over the web,
on my computer, and using built-in graphics. As I'm doing this, I'm often
bringing large image files into my PowerPoint without thinking of the file size
implications on my PowerPoint file. That can make for a quick and fluid design
process, but will leave you with some cleanup needed.
Often, I find myself pasting images into a presentation from all over the web,
on my computer, and using built-in graphics. As I'm doing this, I'm often
bringing large image files into my PowerPoint without thinking of the file size
implications on my PowerPoint file. That can make for a quick and fluid design
process, but will leave you with some cleanup needed.
To get started with image compression, select an image inside of your
PowerPoint PPT file. On the ribbon, you'll see a Picture Tools > Format tab.
Click on this tab, and then find the Compress Pictures option.
Often, I find myself pasting images into a presentation from all over the web,
on my computer, and using built-in graphics. As I'm doing this, I'm often
bringing large image files into my PowerPoint without thinking of the file size
implications on my PowerPoint file. That can make for a quick and fluid design
process, but will leave you with some cleanup needed.
Often, I find myself pasting images into a presentation from all over the web,
on my computer, and using built-in graphics. As I'm doing this, I'm often
bringing large image files into my PowerPoint without thinking of the file size
implications on my PowerPoint file. That can make for a quick and fluid design
process, but will leave you with some cleanup needed.
Often, I find myself pasting images into a presentation from all over the web,
on my computer, and using built-in graphics. As I'm doing this, I'm often
bringing large image files into my PowerPoint without thinking of the file size
implications on my PowerPoint file. That can make for a quick and fluid design
process, but will leave you with some cleanup needed.
Often, I find myself pasting images into a presentation from all over the web,
on my computer, and using built-in graphics. As I'm doing this, I'm often
bringing large image files into my PowerPoint without thinking of the file size
implications on my PowerPoint file. That can make for a quick and fluid design
process, but will leave you with some cleanup needed.
Often, I find myself pasting images into a presentation from all over the web,
on my computer, and using built-in graphics. As I'm doing this, I'm often
bringing large image files into my PowerPoint without thinking of the file size
implications on my PowerPoint file. That can make for a quick and fluid design
process, but will leave you with some cleanup needed.