simplefahmah
Technical User
I’ve finally completed a Power Point slide show of our trip through the Southwest. It has
music and everything. I plan to make CD Rom’s and send to selected family and friends.
I’m having a bit of trouble with this last part. I embedded the (6) music files (which are in
.wav format, each one about 30-40 mb) into the PPP. This increased the size of the PPP
from 64 mb (soundless version) to about 260 mb (sound version).
The CD worked fine on my computer which has 1GB of ram, but when I played it on my
wife’s computer, it balked and said there wasn’t enough virtual memory. Her RAM is 512 mb. I could adjust the virtual memory on her machine to make it work, but I don’t want my general audience to be faced with this problem.
So I took my music files and reformatted them into .mp3 formats, which reduced their
individual sizes by an order of magnitude, to the 2-3 mb range. However, when I tried to
embed these files in my PPP, I couldn’t. They were linked to their parent file on my C
drive and try as I might, I couldn’t embed them into my PPP. I checked my power point
-tools/options tab, which I've set at "link sounds > 50,000 kb", so they should embed rather than link.
This problem doesn’t arise when I try to embed the music as .wav files. They are sucked
right into the PPP, no problem, but as I mentioned, they make for an obese PPP.
So my first question: Is there a reason that .mp3 files won’t embed in Power Point? Can I overcome this?
I came up with a different approach, but it has problems too:
I could burn my music into a folder (say, "/music") on the CD along with the PPP and
link to these files in my slide show, but therein lies another glitch: If I link the music on
the CD Rom to the PPP, the location of the file will be identified as residing in E:/music,
since my E drive is my CD burner/player. But for some people, their CD player is named
"D" or "F". So if PPP looks for the music clips in E:/music on someone’s machine which is
playing the disk in drive D, they won’t find it.
Is there a way to reference the location of the music file so that all machines look in the
same drive that the parent PPP is playing from, regardless of the designation of CD drive?
music and everything. I plan to make CD Rom’s and send to selected family and friends.
I’m having a bit of trouble with this last part. I embedded the (6) music files (which are in
.wav format, each one about 30-40 mb) into the PPP. This increased the size of the PPP
from 64 mb (soundless version) to about 260 mb (sound version).
The CD worked fine on my computer which has 1GB of ram, but when I played it on my
wife’s computer, it balked and said there wasn’t enough virtual memory. Her RAM is 512 mb. I could adjust the virtual memory on her machine to make it work, but I don’t want my general audience to be faced with this problem.
So I took my music files and reformatted them into .mp3 formats, which reduced their
individual sizes by an order of magnitude, to the 2-3 mb range. However, when I tried to
embed these files in my PPP, I couldn’t. They were linked to their parent file on my C
drive and try as I might, I couldn’t embed them into my PPP. I checked my power point
-tools/options tab, which I've set at "link sounds > 50,000 kb", so they should embed rather than link.
This problem doesn’t arise when I try to embed the music as .wav files. They are sucked
right into the PPP, no problem, but as I mentioned, they make for an obese PPP.
So my first question: Is there a reason that .mp3 files won’t embed in Power Point? Can I overcome this?
I came up with a different approach, but it has problems too:
I could burn my music into a folder (say, "/music") on the CD along with the PPP and
link to these files in my slide show, but therein lies another glitch: If I link the music on
the CD Rom to the PPP, the location of the file will be identified as residing in E:/music,
since my E drive is my CD burner/player. But for some people, their CD player is named
"D" or "F". So if PPP looks for the music clips in E:/music on someone’s machine which is
playing the disk in drive D, they won’t find it.
Is there a way to reference the location of the music file so that all machines look in the
same drive that the parent PPP is playing from, regardless of the designation of CD drive?