Microsoft PowerPoint 2007

By Staff writers on 13 February 2007

Microsoft PowerPoint 2007 makes prettier presentations, so an upgrade may be in order if your work is particularly image-focused and you don't mind relearning the application. If PowerPoint 2003 serves you well, however, it offers most of the same features, albeit with flatter-looking graphics.

Editor's rating:7.4 User rating:5.4
  • Good: Adds live previews of presentations and image styles • Introduces smaller, less corruptible files • Improves document security • Integrates with other applications
  • Bad: Moves all of its commands • Contextual tabs and style galleries can be distracting • Converters required to open new Open XML file formats in PowerPoint 2000 through 2003 • No free way to save work to the Web
  • RRP: TBA

PowerPoint is the best-known software for creating slide shows, whether they're used in a grade school history class, for a corporate sales pitch, or, in the most famous example, to warn the world about climate change. As with the rest of the Office 2007, the changes to PowerPoint are ambitious and drastic. The new interface rearranges every function you may have memorised, and the file formats are different. Plus, while you can hide the Ribbon by double-clicking on a tab, there's no going back to a "classic" view of PowerPoint that better resembles 2007's predecessors.

Our installation of various Office editions on Windows XP computers took between 10 and 20 minutes, which was quicker than previous editions of Office. You'll have to be online to access some services, such as Help and How-To as well as Clip Art and document templates. Our reviews of Microsoft Office 2007 detail the installation process and the particulars of each edition.

Interface
Once PowerPoint is up and running, you'll find that each command is in a new place. The new program is more visually focused, so colorful icons describe many features. PowerPoint 2007 adopts the tabbed, top-heavy Ribbon toolbar also found in Word and Excel 2007. The File menu is gone, its commands moved beneath the Office logo in the corner. We were perplexed by the arrangement of some features on the Ribbon, mostly with features that we expected to be on the Insert tab. New Slide is on the Home tab, not on Insert, for example. Many tabs won't appear until you select an item on the page. Clicking on a picture triggers the Picture Tools formatting tab to display. The same process applies when working with images, sounds, charts, drawing tools, and SmartArt. If your computer already has software installed that integrates with Office 2007, PowerPoint and other applications will display an Add-Ins tab. In our case, the Add-Ins tab showed commands from a third-party video-capture application.


SmartArt styles can create instant flowcharts from your text, once you find the conversion command.

There are some useful little tweaks as well. Right-clicking the mouse when hovering over text within a slide will display a mini formatting toolbar and drop-down menu. Right-clicking the mouse within a chart brings up editing tools specific to the chart. Power users can press the ALT key to display keyboard shortcuts. We find the strongest selling point of PowerPoint 2007 to be the dynamic galleries of images that put a variety of three-dimensional styles at your fingertips and render them live on the page before you click.

Features
Designed to help you get a point across with images, PowerPoint 2007 makes some useful adjustments. Drop-down menus of styles, WordArt, and slide animations let you roll your mouse over them to preview a change on the page before you finalise it. You won't need a design degree to create a good-looking slide show. The colour themes are more attractive overall than in 2003, and once you pick one, your theme will apply to the other preview galleries. There are loads of new document templates, many of which you can find at Microsoft's Web site, and you can customise your own. Next to the more elegant-looking styles from PowerPoint 2007, slide shows made in PowerPoint 2003 might look pretty flat.

However, some newbies to 2007 may find it tricky to grasp the ever-changing galleries, which can be clumsy to work with. For example, you must precisely arrange your view of a page when applying styles to prevent the drop-down menu from obscuring the changes. Sometimes we couldn't benefit from the live previews because a small picture on the page was hidden by its connected style gallery. We found SmartArt less than intuitive to use. This feature lets you create attractive flowcharts, pyramids, and other diagrams, but when we selected bulleted text to convert to SmartArt, the big button on the Insert tab didn't do the trick. The correct conversion button was a tiny item beneath the Home tab (you can also right-click the mouse).


Drop-down galleries let you preview animations and other style changes on the page before you make up your mind.

PowerPoint offers new options for safely sharing slide shows, which should be handy if your presentation is under a nondisclosure agreement. The Prepare options beneath the Office button let you edit metadata and remove potentially embarrassing changes. When you choose Inspect Document, Document Properties will appear below the Ribbon toolbar so you can change the author name, comments, and more. The Review tab helpfully clusters commenting and spellchecking. Unfortunately, Microsoft hasn't created a way to instantly upload a presentation so you can take it on the road and access it from an online account. For that, you'll need Microsoft Groove or SharePoint server tools. You could also install a free add-in from the third-party, such as Zoho's Web-based presentations software. Zoho's application, however, remains in a rough state and lacks a lot of PowerPoint's functionality.

However, there's not much new in the way of managing multimedia files. When we clicked away from the audio icon, we had a hard time later finding the sound to edit it. An audio icon appears within the centre-pane view of a slide, but it's hard to see within the thumbnails when you're scrolling through the pages. Nor are there tie-ins to Microsoft's Web-based products, such as MSN Soapbox Video, to let you make dynamic presentations that integrate online content.

Microsoft's new, default Open XML file formats could be a pain if you send and receive presentations with users who might be running older software. The new file extension for PowerPoint 2007 is PPTX. People with PowerPoint 2000 and 2003 can only open PPTX files after they install a converter. If you use PowerPoint 2007 to save a backward-compatible, PPT file, all the dynamic images and styles will flatten. Once you convert a PPT document back to PPTX, that flattened content should return to its original state.


Document Properties options let you edit the names of authors and editors as well as their comments so you can wipe the slate clean before sending a presentation to a client.

Luckily, PowerPoint integrates better than ever with other Office 2007 applications. It's great that you can preview presentations from e-mails within Outlook 2007, for instance. And you can embed an Excel chart within a presentation and see the chart change while you edit the data in Excel in a different window.

Service and support
Boxed editions of Microsoft Office 2007 include a decent, 174-page Getting Started guide. During the first 90 days, you can contact tech support for free, and help at any time with any security-related or virus problems is also free. Beyond that, paid support costs a painfully high US$49 per telephone or e-mail incident. Luckily, Microsoft's online help is excellent, although we're displeased that Microsoft and other software makers are increasingly promoting do-it-yourself assistance. We especially like the PowerPoint help, which walks you through where commands have moved since Office 2003. You can also pose questions to the large community of Microsoft Office users via free support forums and chats. Microsoft Office Diagnostics tool, included with the Office 2007 suites, is also designed to detect and repair problems if something goes haywire.

Conclusion
Is PowerPoint 2007 worth the upgrade? Probably not, if you rarely use the program. Other than the new graphical styles and dynamic galleries, there's not much new here. At the same time, PowerPoint's live graphical previews, SmartArt, and easy-to-pick design templates could make the difference between a sales pitch and a sales contract for some professionals. If you don't want your older PowerPoint presentations to be overshadowed by more up-do-date-looking ones crafted by someone who has already upgraded, then the 2007 edition will be worth your while.

Topics: microsoft, windows, office, powerpoint, rtm, 2007, presentation, slideshow, tab

Comments (6)

  • zazzy gave a review on 20/10/2009 12:01 Report abuse

    • Good: it is very easy to use and faster
    • Bad: it is difficult to understand

    TRY IT !

  • virosh gave 10/10 on 09/06/2008 13:43 Report abuse

    very good and easy to use

  • bberg009 gave 2/10 on 02/02/2008 03:47 Report abuse

    • Good: None what so ever..
    • Bad: busy graphs, wasted space and hard to get to any controls. tons of busy crap that makes it hard to work. I surrender after 15 years with MS, I simply give up: time to buy an Apple

    Horrible way of treating customers. The "ribbon is a pain in the ***" that takes up most of the screen. Finding the undo is a 30 minutes task (CTRL-Z). This is like General motors moving all the controls on your car, and placing the steering wheel in the back seat and backwards just for fun....

  • AnnoyedBy2007 gave 3/10 on 18/06/2007 15:25 Report abuse

    • Good: Lovely to look at.
    • Bad: Very difficult to pick up an go if you're an expert PowerPoint 2003 user.

    Nobody warned me that Powerpoint 2007 has a completely different UI than Poweroint 2003. My fingers have memorized keyboard shortcuts that are now completely useless.

  • greenboots gave 2/10 on 05/03/2007 08:17 Report abuse

    "PowerPoint is the best-known software for creating slide shows, whether they're used in a grade school history class, for a corporate sales pitch, or, in the most famous example, to warn the world about climate change."

    The "most famous example" referred to in the article is a very misleading statement. "An Inconvemient Truth" was actually made with Apple Keynote. Please check your facts before making statements like this.

  • halobro gave 10/10 on 27/01/2007 21:25 Report abuse

    • Good: very easy to use once understood
      can save time with its new features
    • Bad: i bit fiddly to get started with

    It's a really handy component in the MS office 2007 range. It's a bit fiddly to work around however once understood it makes its predesessors look like atari relics

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