Creating a Web Interface
In most cases you won't just post a Web presentation on a Web site "raw," without any kind of introduction. You will want to introduce the presentation on a more traditional Web page and provide a link to the presentation.Perhaps you already have an existing Web page from which you will link, and if so, that's great-just edit the page to include a link to the presentation-but if not, you can create a very basic one in PowerPoint.Start a new presentation with a single slide in it (the Title and Text layout would be a good one for it, with the bullets turned off), and save it as a Web page. Then, create instructions and hyperlinks on it to access the presentation. You know how to make hyperlinks from earlier in this chapter. Figure 17-14 shows an example that makes both a Web version and a native PowerPoint version available, as well as the PowerPoint viewer.
Figure 17-14: An instruction page like this one provides hyperlinks to the various files that visitors to the Web site may want to access.
Tip | To make the HTML presentation start in full-screen view, see this article www.oldfco.ca/tutorial. |