Content that can be viewed by a wide variety of computer users, including those who may have disabilities that require them to use adaptive technologies such as screen reading programs.
A note you insert on a slide while reviewing.
The process of transforming data into a non-readable form for security purposes.
A setting that prevents changes from being made to a presentation unless the user chooses to acknowledge the warning and edit it anyway; does not provide security.
The changes identified between two versions of a presentation when using Compare.
Blank, with no characters or spaces.
A file format that most word processing programs support, including the free OpenOffice suite.
A word or phrase that you must type for access to an encrypted file
Page Description Language, one of the page layout formats to which PowerPoint can export; requires Adobe Reader or Adobe Acrobat to read.
A presentation that consists of a series of full-screen graphics of slide content, placed on blank slide backgrounds.
Able to be used on a variety of operating systems.
A presentation that opens by default in Slide Show view.
A text file format that most word processing programs can open and save as.
The format that PowerPoint saves to when creating videos from presentation files.
One of the page description languages that PowerPoint can output to; requires an XPS Viewer utility to view; this utility comes with Windows Vista and higher and can be downloaded free from Microsoft for other Windows versions.
A utility that comes free with Windows Vista and later versions that opens an XPS file
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