M
M
We put together a presentation that uses the PowerPoint 2003 viewer to
review a variety of info - image files, Microsoft Word docs, PDF files - and
so on. Unfortunately, when the 'non-slide' items are clicked, Microsoft
Office rears it's ugly head and warns that "Some files can contain
viruses..." Duh! The client says that is unacceptably stupid, and I
couldn't agree more.
There is no workaround when using the 2003 Viewer, so I've reverted to using
Viewer 97 (which still allows the /V switch).
If I launch ppview32.exe, then select the ortho.ppt show, all the links work
perfectly (and, yes, they are all in the same directory). But I'd like to
elminiate the extra (clunky) step of selecting the ortho.ppt file, since
that's the only PowerPoint choice. If the .bat file reads
@ppview32.exe /V ortho.ppt
it launches straight into the presentation, but the links to the .docs and
..pdfs results in a "The address of this site is not valid" error.
I get the same error when running a CD in autorun mode, using the
open=ppview32.exe /V /S "playlist.lst" command line (where the only entry in
'playlist.lst' is 'ortho.ppt').
Help!
Michael
review a variety of info - image files, Microsoft Word docs, PDF files - and
so on. Unfortunately, when the 'non-slide' items are clicked, Microsoft
Office rears it's ugly head and warns that "Some files can contain
viruses..." Duh! The client says that is unacceptably stupid, and I
couldn't agree more.
There is no workaround when using the 2003 Viewer, so I've reverted to using
Viewer 97 (which still allows the /V switch).
If I launch ppview32.exe, then select the ortho.ppt show, all the links work
perfectly (and, yes, they are all in the same directory). But I'd like to
elminiate the extra (clunky) step of selecting the ortho.ppt file, since
that's the only PowerPoint choice. If the .bat file reads
@ppview32.exe /V ortho.ppt
it launches straight into the presentation, but the links to the .docs and
..pdfs results in a "The address of this site is not valid" error.
I get the same error when running a CD in autorun mode, using the
open=ppview32.exe /V /S "playlist.lst" command line (where the only entry in
'playlist.lst' is 'ortho.ppt').
Help!
Michael