Yes, each slide is pretty much its own document. If you switch to
another slide or add a new one then you have a new workspace. The only
exception I know of is the "magic move" transition. This is where if you
have some object at coordinate 0,0 on one slide then copy/paste that
same object to a second slide and position it at 50,50, using the magic
move transition will have that object slide down and right when you go
from the first slide to the second.
There was a discussion thread about presentor mode back in May:
https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups=#!topic/macvisionaries/RMdB2MqNjfo
I know there have been updates since then so maybe it's better now, but
I found it to be buggy with voiecover.
CB
On 10/11/12 2:20 PM, Matthew Campbell wrote:
Hello all.
I figure it's about time to figure out some of the ins and outs of KeyNote, and
so now I've got some questions.
1. Is each slide treated like a mini document, and can I work with it as such?
2. When playing through the slide show with Command Option P, should I not be
able to read any text in the currently playing slide?
Thanks for any assistance.
PS: If it is not worth trying to make KeyNote work, are there any powerPoint
alternatives? I here PowerPoint isn't even accessible under Windows Anyway.
Matthew Campbell.
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