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Sunday, August 26, 2012

Create a PowerPoint presentation for a kiosk


Create a PowerPoint presentation for a kiosk

Have you ever wanted to create an interactive presentation to promote your company or product at a conference, trade show, or convention? With a new option in Microsoft PowerPoint, you can add new interactivity to a presentation by setting an animation effect to play only when a specified item is clicked by a visitor to your kiosk. For example, you can ask the visitors to your kiosk to choose an object to click; depending upon which object they click, they're taken to different areas of your presentation and receive varying information. An interactive presentation can often be more compelling for visitors to your kiosk than a presentation that simply runs through a set of timings.
A visitor clicks an object and starts an animation
You can set your kiosk presentation to automatically return to the first slide of the presentation once a visitor has viewed the entire presentation, or if the presentation has been idle for a period of time, so that you do not have to attend to the kiosk at all times.
This article explains how to set animations in a presentation that play only when a visitor to your kiosk clicks a designated object. This is just one element of interactivity you can add to a presentation for a kiosk; there are other elements you can add to your presentation, and you can decide just how much control you want to give to the visitors to your kiosk.
Before you start
Create a sample presentation, and then follow the steps below to create your own animation that plays only when a designated object is clicked.
Step 1: Add an animation effect to a text box
First, you will add an animation effect to a text box in the sample presentation. When a visitor to your kiosk presentation clicks a designated object, this animation will play.
1.    Open the sample presentation in PowerPoint, view all the elements of the presentation, and then preview the slide show.
2.    In normal view, on the Slides tab, select slide 2.
3.    On the Insert menu, click Text Box, click anywhere on slide 2, and then type Water Sports.
4.    Click the new text box that contains the words "Water Sports," and then on the Slide Show menu, clickCustom Animation.
5.    In the Custom Animation task pane, click the Add Effect button, point to Entrance, and then click Fly In.
6.    Before proceeding to Step 2 below, preview the animation by clicking the Play button in the Custom Animation task pane.
Step 2: Designate an object to play the animation
After you have added the animation effect to the new text box, you must designate an object that the user can click to play the animation during a slide show.
1.    Select slide 2, and then on the Insert menu, point to Picture, and then click AutoShapes.
2.    On the AutoShapes toolbar, click Basic Shapes, and then click a shape (for example, Rectangle).
3.    Click anywhere on slide 2. The rectangle appears.
4.    If the Custom Animation task pane is not displayed, on the Slide Show menu, click Custom Animation.
5.    In the Custom Animation task pane, click the animation effect for the new text box (added above), click the drop-down arrow, and then click Timing.
6.    Click the Triggers button.
7.    Select the Start effect on click of: option, and then select "Rectangle" (or the name of the AutoShape you added) from the list. This will set the rectangle on slide 2 to play the animation effect when the visitor clicks the rectangle. Click OK.
8.    Before proceeding to Step 3 below, click the Slide Show button in the Custom Animation task pane, and then on slide 2, click the rectangle to see how this icon controls when the animated text box plays during the slide show. After you have finished viewing the slide show, end the show and return to the presentation.
Step 3: Make your presentation self-running
The final step in preparing a presentation for a kiosk is to make the presentation self-running so that you do not have to attend to it at all times. To do this, you need to add action buttons to the slide master, and then designate the presentation as a slide show for a kiosk. The action buttons will allow visitors to your kiosk to move through the slides in the self-running presentation, and the kiosk setting will loop the presentation to the first slide if a visitor has reached the last slide within it, or it will return the presentation to the first slide when it has been idle on a manually advanced slide for longer than five minutes.
Add action buttons to your slides
1.    On the View menu, point to Master, and then click Slide Master.
2.    On the Slide Show menu, point to Action Buttons, and click Action Button: Back or Previous. Click where you want the button to appear on the master, and then in the Action Settings dialog box, click OK. This button will allow the visitor to view the previous slide in the presentation.
3.    On the Slide Show menu, point to Action Buttons, and then click Action Button: Forward or Next. Click where you want this button to appear on the master, and then in the Action Settings dialog box, click OK. This button will allow the visitor to view the next slide in the presentation.
4.    On the Slide Master View toolbar, click Close Master View.
 NOTE   On the Slide Master View, you can customize the action buttons by right-clicking each button and then clicking Format AutoShape.
For more information about masters and action buttons, see PowerPoint Help.
Set up the show for a kiosk
1.    On the Slide Show menu, click Set Up Show.
2.    In the Set Up Show dialog box, click Browsed at a kiosk (full screen). This setting also restricts users from changing your presentation. Click OK.
3.    Click the Slide Show button in the lower left of the PowerPoint window to preview the changes you have made to the sample presentation.
 NOTE   In the sample presentation, notice that the icon labeled "snow sports" is also set as an item that controls an animation effect.

The standard work-around for this is to have your buttons link to create
a blank slide just before the slide with animations. Have your buttons
link to the blank slide and set the blank slide to automatcally advance

to the next slide afte 0 seconds

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