Burning a PowerPoint Presentation and keeping hyperlinks.

S

Sarah

I'm working on a huge PowerPoint presentation for work and we have to burn it
to a disk when we're done so we can mail it across country. The presentation
is very content heavy with lots of hyperlinks to documents on my PC (pdf's,
video clips, etc.). I'm wondering, if I burn the presentation to a disk, how
can I maintain these hyperlinks to the documents. They will want to point to
a certain drive on my pc and most likely won't work when being played on the
disk. I know I can't modify the content once it is burned to the disk, so
what can I do to make sure this presentation doesn't lose everything?
 
A

alexbear88

I'm working on a huge PowerPoint presentation for work and we have to burn it
to a disk when we're done so we can mail it across country.  The presentation
is very content heavy with lots of hyperlinks to documents on my PC (pdf's,
video clips, etc.).  I'm wondering, if I burn the presentation to a disk, how
can I maintain these hyperlinks to the documents.  They will want to point to
a certain drive on my pc and most likely won't work when being played on the
disk.  I know I can't modify the content once it is burned to the disk,so
what can I do to make sure this presentation doesn't lose everything?

As you don't want to lose anything in the original PowerPoint
including the hyperlinks in it.
I recommend a conversion tool may help you do it easily.
Acoolsoft PPT2DVD is a professional PowerPoint to DVD conversion tool
which helps you easily burn PowerPoint to DVD, or converts them to
MPEG Video.
The final output will retain all subtleties from the original
presentation, such as animations, transitions, sounds, video clips,
and even hyperlinks between slides.
You can also create flexible DVD Menus for your PowerPoint
presentations to play on TV with a DVD remote control.

More info about this tool:
http://www.ppt-to-video.com/powerpoint-to-dvd-overview.html

Free download from:
http://www.ppt-to-video.com/powerpoint-to-dvd-download.html

Or you can use its PPT2Video Converter, after you have converted the
PowerPoint to video format, then burn it to a disc.
More info about this tool:
http://www.ppt-to-video.com/powerpoint-to-video-overview.html

Free download:
http://www.ppt-to-video.com/powerpoint-to-dvd-download.html

Hope it helps!
 

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