Sometimes you need to replace the default font family used when opening a blank PowerPoint presentation. Normally Calibri is the font selected by default when you open PowerPoint. However, you can. Install the font in 'Computer' not 'User.' When you double-click a font file in OSX, the operating system installs fonts in 'User' by default. I give Daniel credit for trying. IDesign has the right answer. Mac Save As PowerPoint Package has the same basic functionality that Daniel described in Windows PowerPoint Package for CD option. When Microsoft brought the Save As PowerPoint Package feature from the Mac to the Windows version of PowerPoint they renamed it Package for CD for some reason. You mentioned something that no one talked about - fonts. PowerPoint does not let you embed fonts. And your hunch that not having the same fonts on the machine that plays the presentation as the fonts on the machine that made the presentation can cause variations in the presentation's appearance is spot-on. PowerPoint will automatically substitute existing fonts for missing fonts. There's no easy solution to the font problem. Fonts come in versions and each version displays differently. I bet if you use Font Book application on your computer right now you'd find multiple versions of even such common fonts as Arial and Times New Roman. I purchased 1,000 fonts from MacFonts (about $35 US altogether) and their license allows embedding, So I am presuming that I can use their fonts on machines that I play my presentations on (I'm not a lawyer). My solution is to stick with fonts in their font collection and install the fonts I used in the presentation from their disc on any machine I am using with my presentation. Installing a font only takes a few seconds, and by sticking to MacFont fonts I know nothing willl get substituted. Apple video players for mac. Their fonts are UniCode (good) but don't seem to support advanced typography features such as kerning and ligatures. Google is your friend:) Package for cd option - straight from Microsoft 1. Start PowerPoint 2003 or PowerPoint 2007. Open the PowerPoint presentation file that you want to move. In PowerPoint 2003, click File, and then click Package for CD. In PowerPoint 2007, click the Microsoft Office Button, point to Publish, and then click Package for CD. Note This process packages the presentation for either a folder or a CD. In the Name the CD box, type the name for your folder or your CD. You can include more than one PowerPoint presentation file. If you want to include more files, click Add Files, and then select the additional files that you want to add. ![]() Note By default, PowerPoint Viewer 2003 will play all files automatically in the order that is specified. You can specify the order that you want when you include additional files. If you want, you can click Options to change the following settings: * Include the PowerPoint Viewer * Include linked files * Embed TrueType fonts * Use a password to help to protect the PowerPoint presentation 7. Click either the Copy to Folder button or the Copy to CD button. If you click the Copy to CD button, the file will be copied to the CD. Best of luck! • Tell us some more • Upload in Progress • Upload failed. Please upload a file larger than 100x100 pixels • We are experiencing some problems, please try again. • You can only upload files of type PNG, JPG, or JPEG. • You can only upload files of type 3GP, 3GPP, MP4, MOV, AVI, MPG, MPEG, or RM. • You can only upload photos smaller than 5 MB. • You can only upload videos smaller than 600MB. • You can only upload a photo (png, jpg, jpeg) or a video (3gp, 3gpp, mp4, mov, avi, mpg, mpeg, rm).
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