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Power Point 2003 - can't burn to CD
As a brandnew PP user (and not very savvy computer person), I created a large
photo slide show 804,258 kb. Is this why Package to CD says "file cannot be copied, not enough space on disk" ? Since there does not appear to be an option to use successive disks to hold larger files, is there a disk I can buy that will hold this file? Also,I inserted "new disc" when prompted and numbered them, but they are all apparently blank, nothing was burned on to them. I know very little about discs, speeds, whether data is different than music, and I am desperate to get this show onto a laptop in time for a deadline ! Anything you can do to help this beginner would be greatly appreciated. Ellen D |
#2
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Power Point 2003 - can't burn to CD
If the number you indicate is correct you're dealing with a very small file.
I'm guessing you mean it's roughly 804MB (megabytes) which will not fit on a CDROM. Take a look at the info he http://www.pptfaq.com/FAQ00062.htm If you can get your file size under 700MB you should be able to burn a disc. ......................TD "Ellen D" wrote: As a brandnew PP user (and not very savvy computer person), I created a large photo slide show 804,258 kb. Is this why Package to CD says "file cannot be copied, not enough space on disk" ? Since there does not appear to be an option to use successive disks to hold larger files, is there a disk I can buy that will hold this file? Also,I inserted "new disc" when prompted and numbered them, but they are all apparently blank, nothing was burned on to them. I know very little about discs, speeds, whether data is different than music, and I am desperate to get this show onto a laptop in time for a deadline ! Anything you can do to help this beginner would be greatly appreciated. Ellen D |
#3
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Power Point 2003 - can't burn to CD
Unless you have A LOT of photos (hundreds) in the presentation then they are
probably too high resolution/ There's no point in doing this as the onscreen quality wont improve. As a quick fix do two things a In Tools options save untick enable fast save (never turn it on again!) b In the picture toolbar find the compress tool that looks like 4 inward arrows and click it choose all pictures web / screen. If you cant see the picture toolbar views toolbars picture Resave and see what the file size is now. -- email john AT technologytrish.co.uk Improve your skills - http://www.technologytrish.co.uk/ppttipshome.html Need a dice throw for a ppt game?- http://www.technologytrish.co.uk/dice.html "Ellen D" wrote: As a brandnew PP user (and not very savvy computer person), I created a large photo slide show 804,258 kb. Is this why Package to CD says "file cannot be copied, not enough space on disk" ? Since there does not appear to be an option to use successive disks to hold larger files, is there a disk I can buy that will hold this file? Also,I inserted "new disc" when prompted and numbered them, but they are all apparently blank, nothing was burned on to them. I know very little about discs, speeds, whether data is different than music, and I am desperate to get this show onto a laptop in time for a deadline ! Anything you can do to help this beginner would be greatly appreciated. Ellen D |
#4
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Power Point 2003 - can't burn to CD
Thank you TD. You are right, my file was actually 785mb to start with (546
photos in the show). I went to your website (excellent !) and followed instructions, including turn off fast save. This dropped the file by 2mb. Then I compressed all pictures. This dropped another 52mb. Then I pruned out 83 photos, which dropped another 138mb. At 645mb, I got the show onto the CD (but not from directly from Package to CD - had to package to folder and then burn - as suggested in threads elsewhere on this site). Tested CD in the desk top - show started right up. Put it in laptop - it read it as a blank. Went to the Cd drive in My Computer - the files were all there, including the viewer, but I didn't know how to get them started, so I just copied the ppt. presentation itself onto the desk top, and opened it with Power Point 2000, which is what I have on the laptop. Once it launched, the show worked fine, but it was so slow launching - minutes and minutes, and I was getting a message about being low on virtual memory. I closed it and followed some more advice on your website: I cleared out the temp folders. I also defragged and did clean disk. TROUBLE ! NOW POWER POINT 2000 WILL NOT OPEN THE SHOW AT ALL: not from the desk top, not from within the program, and not from the disc. Did I delete something critical ? Can you help me fix this ? Still a beginner, and desperate once again ! Thank you so much, Ellen "TDunn" wrote: If the number you indicate is correct you're dealing with a very small file. I'm guessing you mean it's roughly 804MB (megabytes) which will not fit on a CDROM. Take a look at the info he http://www.pptfaq.com/FAQ00062.htm If you can get your file size under 700MB you should be able to burn a disc. .....................TD "Ellen D" wrote: As a brandnew PP user (and not very savvy computer person), I created a large photo slide show 804,258 kb. Is this why Package to CD says "file cannot be copied, not enough space on disk" ? Since there does not appear to be an option to use successive disks to hold larger files, is there a disk I can buy that will hold this file? Also,I inserted "new disc" when prompted and numbered them, but they are all apparently blank, nothing was burned on to them. I know very little about discs, speeds, whether data is different than music, and I am desperate to get this show onto a laptop in time for a deadline ! Anything you can do to help this beginner would be greatly appreciated. Ellen D |
#5
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Power Point 2003 - can't burn to CD
Thank you John, yes I did have a lot of photos, 546 of them ! I followed the
advice on your website (and also T Dunn's): turned off fast save, compressed all pictures, then pruned out 83 photos to get the file down to 645mb. Package to CD did not work directly, so I packaged to folder and then burned the CD. Eventually managed to get just the ppt. show itself onto the laptop desktop and was able to show it with Power Point 2000 (see my reply to TD above). But it launched so slowly I did some housecleaning: deleted temp folders, defragged, did clean disk. As I told TD, now Power Point will not open the show at all ! What did I do wrong ? Can either of you tell me how to fix it ? Thanks to the Thanksgiving Day blizzard, my deadline is now Feb 22 . . . .Thank you so much any help you can give, Ellen "John Wilson" wrote: Unless you have A LOT of photos (hundreds) in the presentation then they are probably too high resolution/ There's no point in doing this as the onscreen quality wont improve. As a quick fix do two things a In Tools options save untick enable fast save (never turn it on again!) b In the picture toolbar find the compress tool that looks like 4 inward arrows and click it choose all pictures web / screen. If you cant see the picture toolbar views toolbars picture Resave and see what the file size is now. -- email john AT technologytrish.co.uk Improve your skills - http://www.technologytrish.co.uk/ppttipshome.html Need a dice throw for a ppt game?- http://www.technologytrish.co.uk/dice.html "Ellen D" wrote: As a brandnew PP user (and not very savvy computer person), I created a large photo slide show 804,258 kb. Is this why Package to CD says "file cannot be copied, not enough space on disk" ? Since there does not appear to be an option to use successive disks to hold larger files, is there a disk I can buy that will hold this file? Also,I inserted "new disc" when prompted and numbered them, but they are all apparently blank, nothing was burned on to them. I know very little about discs, speeds, whether data is different than music, and I am desperate to get this show onto a laptop in time for a deadline ! Anything you can do to help this beginner would be greatly appreciated. Ellen D |
#6
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Power Point 2003 - can't burn to CD
Once it launched, the show worked fine, but it was so slow launching - minutes and minutes, and I was getting a message about being low on virtual memory. I closed it and followed some more advice on your website: I cleared out the temp folders. I also defragged and did clean disk. TROUBLE ! NOW POWER POINT 2000 WILL NOT OPEN THE SHOW AT ALL: not from the desk top, not from within the program, and not from the disc. Did I delete something critical ? Can you help me fix this ? Still a beginner, and desperate once again ! Thank you so much, Ellen When you try to open the show, what happens? Let us know the exact text of any messages that appear. Will PPT start and open other presentations ok? How did you copy the presentation from one computer to the other? ----------------------------------------- Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com PPTools: www.pptools.com ================================================ |
#7
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Power Point 2003 - can't burn to CD
Thank you Steve. The exact text of the message is "PowerPoint can't open the
type of file represented by C:/Documents and Settings/name of husband/Desktop/Tuscany 05-06 compress.ppt" (I named the file "Tuscany 05-06 compress" to distinguish it from my first uncompressed version of the show which is still on the desktop computer, too large to put on cd). This was my first and only Power Point presentation, so there are no other presentations that I can try opening. I copied the presentation from my desktop to the laptop by burning a cd. To do this I first tried PP 2003's Package to CD button, but it didn't work, so I packaged to a folder and then used my cd burning program to put all those files onto a cd (in order, but "loose", as advised in another thread on this site) This cd works on the desktop - the show starts and runs up using PP viewer. (This disc still works on the desktop, even after all my failures on the laptop, so the disc must be ok.) When I put this cd in the laptop, it automatically recognized it only as a "blank", so I checked in the cd drive (My Computer). The files were all there (auto run, viewer, presentation, etc) but I didn't know how to get anything to start up. I dragged just the presentation itself onto the desktop (which copied it there). When I clicked on the presentation, Power Point 2000 opened it, slowly but successfully. But now, after cleaning disc, defragging and emptying temp folder, it will not open. Ellen "Steve Rindsberg" wrote: Once it launched, the show worked fine, but it was so slow launching - minutes and minutes, and I was getting a message about being low on virtual memory. I closed it and followed some more advice on your website: I cleared out the temp folders. I also defragged and did clean disk. TROUBLE ! NOW POWER POINT 2000 WILL NOT OPEN THE SHOW AT ALL: not from the desk top, not from within the program, and not from the disc. Did I delete something critical ? Can you help me fix this ? Still a beginner, and desperate once again ! Thank you so much, Ellen When you try to open the show, what happens? Let us know the exact text of any messages that appear. Will PPT start and open other presentations ok? How did you copy the presentation from one computer to the other? ----------------------------------------- Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com PPTools: www.pptools.com ================================================ |
#8
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Power Point 2003 - can't burn to CD
In article , Ellen D wrote:
Thank you Steve. The exact text of the message is "PowerPoint can't open the type of file represented by C:/Documents and Settings/name of husband/Desktop/Tuscany 05-06 compress.ppt" (I named the file "Tuscany 05-06 compress" to distinguish it from my first uncompressed version of the show which is still on the desktop computer, too large to put on cd). So you still have the earlier version ... good! I was afraid you might've lost hours of work. I copied the presentation from my desktop to the laptop by burning a cd. To do this I first tried PP 2003's Package to CD button, but it didn't work, so I packaged to a folder and then used my cd burning program to put all those files onto a cd (in order, but "loose", as advised in another thread on this site) This cd works on the desktop - the show starts and runs up using PP viewer. (This disc still works on the desktop, even after all my failures on the laptop, so the disc must be ok.) Not necessarily. The default setting for most CD burning programs seems to be "Shoot the user in the foot". They want to leave the CD open so you can later add more files. That's nice and generally works pretty well as long as you have that particular program installed on your PC. It also nearly guarantees that the CD won't work well (or at all) on PCs that don't have that software. What program are you using to burn the CD? Poke around in its options settings and look for a setting that allows you to add more files to the CD later. Turn it OFF. Put a piece of tape over it so you're never tempted to turn it on again. ;-) Try burning a new CD and see if that helps. When I put this cd in the laptop, it automatically recognized it only as a "blank", so I checked in the cd drive (My Computer). The files were all there (auto run, viewer, presentation, etc) but I didn't know how to get anything to start up. I dragged just the presentation itself onto the desktop (which copied it there). When I clicked on the presentation, Power Point 2000 opened it, slowly but successfully. But now, after cleaning disc, defragging and emptying temp folder, it will not open. Ellen "Steve Rindsberg" wrote: Once it launched, the show worked fine, but it was so slow launching - minutes and minutes, and I was getting a message about being low on virtual memory. I closed it and followed some more advice on your website: I cleared out the temp folders. I also defragged and did clean disk. TROUBLE ! NOW POWER POINT 2000 WILL NOT OPEN THE SHOW AT ALL: not from the desk top, not from within the program, and not from the disc. Did I delete something critical ? Can you help me fix this ? Still a beginner, and desperate once again ! Thank you so much, Ellen When you try to open the show, what happens? Let us know the exact text of any messages that appear. Will PPT start and open other presentations ok? How did you copy the presentation from one computer to the other? ----------------------------------------- Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com PPTools: www.pptools.com ================================================ ----------------------------------------- Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com PPTools: www.pptools.com ================================================ |
#9
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Power Point 2003 - can't burn to CD
Thank you again Steve. Yes, I still have the earlier uncompressed
presentation, plus the one which I compressed and put onto CD. I re-inserted the same CD into the laptop. Again, it read as blank, but I went to My Computercd drive and dragged/copied just the presentation itself to the desktop. It offered to replace the earlier file (which is when I noticed the earlier one had somehow lost 4mb - it must have gotten corrupted). I clicked the re-installed file and Power Point opened it ! Hooray ! I was able to run through the show, even make some modifications to it. This time, however, before saving and closing, I remembered what everyone was saying about uncheckiing "allow fast saves", and did this on the laptop power point. (I had already done it on the desktop computer.) I have opened and closed the presentation several times now, slowly but successfully, so knock on wood, everything will go well for my meeting. I think that the problem may not have been related to my hard drive "housecleaning" at all, but that the file got corrupted when I closed it in Power Point 2000 with fast save enabled. What do you think ? About the CD burning: this is not only my first and only PPT presentation, it is also the first and only time I have ever burned a CD, and I used the only one I had, an Imation CD-RW 4x-10x compatable, which came with the desktop. Today I bought a pack of "Memorex CD-RW up to 4x" and a pack of "HP CD-RW 12x". Since I know nothing about speed, before I open the packs, is one speed better or more versatile in different computers than another ? If so, then that is the one I will use. The CD program that came with my computer is Sonic Digital Media LE. v7. I will look for the setting that allows me to put more files on later and turn it OFF - and tape it ! :-) If you will tell me which speed CD to use, if it makes a difference, I will make a new CD of the presentation package and see if I can get it to autorun on the laptop. Thank you again for all your help ! I am a much happier camper today than yesterday. Ellen "Steve Rindsberg" wrote: In article , Ellen D wrote: Thank you Steve. The exact text of the message is "PowerPoint can't open the type of file represented by C:/Documents and Settings/name of husband/Desktop/Tuscany 05-06 compress.ppt" (I named the file "Tuscany 05-06 compress" to distinguish it from my first uncompressed version of the show which is still on the desktop computer, too large to put on cd). So you still have the earlier version ... good! I was afraid you might've lost hours of work. I copied the presentation from my desktop to the laptop by burning a cd. To do this I first tried PP 2003's Package to CD button, but it didn't work, so I packaged to a folder and then used my cd burning program to put all those files onto a cd (in order, but "loose", as advised in another thread on this site) This cd works on the desktop - the show starts and runs up using PP viewer. (This disc still works on the desktop, even after all my failures on the laptop, so the disc must be ok.) Not necessarily. The default setting for most CD burning programs seems to be "Shoot the user in the foot". They want to leave the CD open so you can later add more files. That's nice and generally works pretty well as long as you have that particular program installed on your PC. It also nearly guarantees that the CD won't work well (or at all) on PCs that don't have that software. What program are you using to burn the CD? Poke around in its options settings and look for a setting that allows you to add more files to the CD later. Turn it OFF. Put a piece of tape over it so you're never tempted to turn it on again. ;-) Try burning a new CD and see if that helps. When I put this cd in the laptop, it automatically recognized it only as a "blank", so I checked in the cd drive (My Computer). The files were all there (auto run, viewer, presentation, etc) but I didn't know how to get anything to start up. I dragged just the presentation itself onto the desktop (which copied it there). When I clicked on the presentation, Power Point 2000 opened it, slowly but successfully. But now, after cleaning disc, defragging and emptying temp folder, it will not open. Ellen "Steve Rindsberg" wrote: Once it launched, the show worked fine, but it was so slow launching - minutes and minutes, and I was getting a message about being low on virtual memory. I closed it and followed some more advice on your website: I cleared out the temp folders. I also defragged and did clean disk. TROUBLE ! NOW POWER POINT 2000 WILL NOT OPEN THE SHOW AT ALL: not from the desk top, not from within the program, and not from the disc. Did I delete something critical ? Can you help me fix this ? Still a beginner, and desperate once again ! Thank you so much, Ellen When you try to open the show, what happens? Let us know the exact text of any messages that appear. Will PPT start and open other presentations ok? How did you copy the presentation from one computer to the other? ----------------------------------------- Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com PPTools: www.pptools.com ================================================ ----------------------------------------- Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com PPTools: www.pptools.com ================================================ |
#10
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Power Point 2003 - can't burn to CD
This time, however, before saving and closing, I remembered what everyone
was saying about uncheckiing "allow fast saves", and did this on the laptop power point. (I had already done it on the desktop computer.) I have opened and closed the presentation several times now, slowly but successfully, so knock on wood, everything will go well for my meeting. I think that the problem may not have been related to my hard drive "housecleaning" at all, but that the file got corrupted when I closed it in Power Point 2000 with fast save enabled. What do you think ? It's possible but I still incline to blaming the CD. About the CD burning: this is not only my first and only PPT presentation, it is also the first and only time I have ever burned a CD, and I used the only one I had, an Imation CD-RW 4x-10x compatable, which came with the desktop. Today I bought a pack of "Memorex CD-RW up to 4x" and a pack of "HP CD-RW 12x". Since I know nothing about speed, before I open the packs, is one speed better or more versatile in different computers than another ? If so, then that is the one I will use. I'd stick with regular CDs rather than rewriteable ones, but you may want to keep those around for other uses. The CD program that came with my computer is Sonic Digital Media LE. v7. I will look for the setting that allows me to put more files on later and turn it OFF - and tape it ! :-) If you will tell me which speed CD to use, if it makes a difference, I will make a new CD of the presentation package and see if I can get it to autorun on the laptop. I used to have this on my laptop but uninstalled it a while back. I think you're looking for the Options dialog box, choose Data CD and look for options like "Allow adding files later" and turn that sucka' off. Thank you again for all your help ! I am a much happier camper today than yesterday. Ellen Well, glad to hear it! "Steve Rindsberg" wrote: In article , Ellen D wrote: Thank you Steve. The exact text of the message is "PowerPoint can't open the type of file represented by C:/Documents and Settings/name of husband/Desktop/Tuscany 05-06 compress.ppt" (I named the file "Tuscany 05-06 compress" to distinguish it from my first uncompressed version of the show which is still on the desktop computer, too large to put on cd). So you still have the earlier version ... good! I was afraid you might've lost hours of work. I copied the presentation from my desktop to the laptop by burning a cd. To do this I first tried PP 2003's Package to CD button, but it didn't work, so I packaged to a folder and then used my cd burning program to put all those files onto a cd (in order, but "loose", as advised in another thread on this site) This cd works on the desktop - the show starts and runs up using PP viewer. (This disc still works on the desktop, even after all my failures on the laptop, so the disc must be ok.) Not necessarily. The default setting for most CD burning programs seems to be "Shoot the user in the foot". They want to leave the CD open so you can later add more files. That's nice and generally works pretty well as long as you have that particular program installed on your PC. It also nearly guarantees that the CD won't work well (or at all) on PCs that don't have that software. What program are you using to burn the CD? Poke around in its options settings and look for a setting that allows you to add more files to the CD later. Turn it OFF. Put a piece of tape over it so you're never tempted to turn it on again. ;-) Try burning a new CD and see if that helps. When I put this cd in the laptop, it automatically recognized it only as a "blank", so I checked in the cd drive (My Computer). The files were all there (auto run, viewer, presentation, etc) but I didn't know how to get anything to start up. I dragged just the presentation itself onto the desktop (which copied it there). When I clicked on the presentation, Power Point 2000 opened it, slowly but successfully. But now, after cleaning disc, defragging and emptying temp folder, it will not open. Ellen "Steve Rindsberg" wrote: Once it launched, the show worked fine, but it was so slow launching - minutes and minutes, and I was getting a message about being low on virtual memory. I closed it and followed some more advice on your website: I cleared out the temp folders. I also defragged and did clean disk. TROUBLE ! NOW POWER POINT 2000 WILL NOT OPEN THE SHOW AT ALL: not from the desk top, not from within the program, and not from the disc. Did I delete something critical ? Can you help me fix this ? Still a beginner, and desperate once again ! Thank you so much, Ellen When you try to open the show, what happens? Let us know the exact text of any messages that appear. Will PPT start and open other presentations ok? How did you copy the presentation from one computer to the other? ----------------------------------------- Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com PPTools: www.pptools.com ================================================ ----------------------------------------- Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com PPTools: www.pptools.com ================================================ ----------------------------------------- Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com PPTools: www.pptools.com ================================================ |
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