When was powerpoint created by microsoft
Most notably, a new tri-pane view that displayed slides, outlines and notes within the same screen. Automatic resizing of both slides and text was introduced, meaning we were no longer faced with text running off slides and slides that were too magnified, and so too was the ability to create tables within the programme itself.
In the early s, two more versions of PowerPoint followed in quick succession. PowerPoint and saw iterative changes that were more evolution than revolution. These included new Outline and Slide thumbnail views, image compression and rotation advances, ways to navigate slide-decks and annotation options. Then after the raft of new PowerPoint versions and feature additions, everything went quiet.
When PowerPoint returned with Windows Vista four years later in , it was a noticeably different animal. In the sense that it introduced a number of features on which the most recent versions are still based, it was all grown up.
Most notably, saw the introduction of the ribbon menu, which split opinion at the time. For an increasingly powerful piece of software, though, this allowed users to access more functionality more quickly.
Live Preview allowed users to see what changes to objects would look like without actually applying them and, in a big step forward, Presenter View used dual monitor support to display slideshows differently on different screens for audiences and presenters. As in the s, the following two versions of PowerPoint added iteratively to the earlier major release. Before there was the Modern UI, who can forget Windows 98 or Windows especially if you are a child of the 90s , which now seems like a UI for a bit game.
However, it was not only the UI but other major features that evolved PowerPoint with the passage of time, including the improved Ribbon UI, better formatting tools, web integration, video and audio embedding features and more. PowerPoint releases for Microsoft Windows between included PowerPoint , , , and , whereas, the Mac versions between included; PowerPoint , , X, , and The latest version of PowerPoint for Mac till date is version PowerPoint came with increased efficiency and the ability to present presentations remotely, which was a feature geared towards professional users to help them improve communication and reduce travel costs.
This feature is known as Broadcast Slide Show and enables the presenter to present presentations via the web without any other software. The successful release of PowerPoint 1. One year later, the second version of the software was introduces. It included color, more word processing features, find and replace, spell checking, color schemes for presentations, guide to color selection, ability to change color scheme retrospectively, shaded coloring for fills. Almost 3 years later, the presentation software was finally released for Windows PCs.
It was announced at the same time as Windows 3. It was the first application designed exclusively for the new Windows 3. New features were: full support for TrueType fonts new in Windows 3. The new version included among others: Word tables, rehearsal mode, hidden slides. Moreover, Microsoft first introduced a standard "Microsoft Office" look and feel shared with Word and Excel , with status bar, toolbars and tooltips.
To align PowerPoint with all other Office applications, Microsoft decided to skip versions 5 and 6 and instead call it PowerPoint The version was the first to include the now called "Presenter View": tools visible to presenter during slide show notes, thumbnails, time clock, re-order and edit slides.
It brought a new user interface a changeable "ribbon" of tools across the top to replace menus and toolbars , SmartArt graphics, many graphical improvements in text and drawing, improved "Presenter View" and widescreen slide formats.
Another major change was the transition from a binary file format, used from to , to a new XML file format. This release added: sections within presentations, a reading view, save as video, insert video from web, embedding video and audio as well as enhanced editing for video and for pictures. The first time ever, the presentation software could be used in your web browser without any installation. Changes: online collaboration by multiple authors, user interface redesigned for multi-touch screens, improved audio, video, animations, and transitions, further changes to Presenter View.
Clipart collections and insertion tool were removed, but were available online. Finally the famous presentation software came on your mobile device with the first versions for Android and iOS. Giving presentations but as well basic editing of slides was already supported on the small screens.
New things in Morph transition, easily remove image backgrounds, inserting 3D models and SVG icons and a handy Zoom feature. Are you interested in even more details on the story? You're lucky! Robert Gaskins gave an interview at the 25th anniversary of PowerPoint where he reveals even more on the history of the famous presentation software.
Most people use PowerPoint mainly for creating presentations, but did you know that there are many other ways of using the software? PowerPoint is not just for presenting plain slides to your audience - it can do much more - here are some interesting use cases you might not know about:. Games are a great way to lighten the mood during a presentation. Also, they engage the audience. Memory, Charades, or PowerPoint Karaoke - your options are endless!
You can choose whatever suits your own presentation style and preference. Gaskins was a polymath who had simultaneously pursued Ph. He in turn hired a bright young software developer named Dennis Austin , who had previously developed compilers at Burroughs and contributed to a GUI operating system at a laptop startup. Gaskins and Austin worked closely to conceptualize, design, and specify Forethought's new product.
Gaskins spotted an opportunity in presentation software and believed they could apply the PARC idiom to this application. He envisioned the user creating slides of text and graphics in a graphical, WYSIWYG environment, then outputting them to mm slides, overhead transparencies, or video displays and projectors, and also sharing them electronically through networks and electronic mail. The presentation would spring directly from the mind of the business user, without having to first transit through the corporate art department.
While Gaskins's ultimate aim for this new product, called Presenter, was to get it onto IBM PCs and their clones, he and Austin soon realized that the Apple Macintosh was the more promising initial target. Designs for the first version of Presenter specified a program that would allow the user to print out slides on Apple's newly released laser printer, the LaserWriter, and photocopy the printouts onto transparencies for use with an overhead projector.
Austin quickly got to work programming Presenter in Apple Pascal on a Lisa computer, eventually switching to a Macintosh. He was joined in the effort by Tom Rudkin , an experienced developer, and the pair hewed as closely as possible to the Macintosh's user interface and modes of operation. Indeed, the source code for Presenter included Apple-provided code for handling text, which Apple used in its own word processor, MacWrite. In April , Forethought introduced its new presentation program to the market very much as it had been conceived, but with a different name.
Presenter was now PowerPoint 1. PowerPoint then became Microsoft's presentation software, first just for the Macintosh and later also for Windows. The Forethought team became Microsoft's Graphics Business Unit, which Gaskins led for five years, while Austin and Rudkin remained the principal developers of PowerPoint for about 10 years. The unit became Microsoft's first outpost in the region, and PowerPoint is still developed there to this day.
While PowerPoint was a success from the start, it nevertheless faced stiff competition, and for several years, Lotus Freelance and Software Publishing's Harvard Graphics commanded larger market shares. Because most users of personal computers required both a word processor and a spreadsheet program, Microsoft's price for Office proved compelling. PowerPoint's competitors, on the other hand, resented the tactic as giving away PowerPoint for free. And for more than a quarter century, Microsoft's competitive logic proved unassailable.
These days, the business software market is shifting again, and Microsoft Office must now compete with similar bundles that are entirely free, from the likes of Google, LibreOffice, and others. Productivity software resides more often than not in the cloud, rather than on the user's device.
Meanwhile, the dominant mode of personal computing globally has firmly shifted from the desktop and laptop to the smartphone. As yet, no new vision of personal computing like the one that came from Xerox PARC in the s has emerged. And so for the moment, it appears that PowerPoint, as we know it, is here to stay. David C. To continue operating during pandemic-related shutdowns, organizations around the world underwent digital transformations.
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Companies that lost revenue in the past few years tended to be behind in using digital technology, the survey found. How can you ensure your organization is prepared for a digital society?
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The session will be available on demand two hours after the live event concludes. It turns out that you don't need a lot of hardware to make a flying robot. Flying robots are usually way, way, way over-engineered, with ridiculously over the top components like two whole wings or an obviously ludicrous four separate motors. Maybe that kind of stuff works for people with more funding than they know what to do with, but for anyone trying to keep to a reasonable budget, all it actually takes to make a flying robot is one single airfoil plus an attached fixed-pitch propeller.
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