Corel Presentations 12

By Brian Nadel, CNET.com on 24/01/2006

More Corel reviews , RRP: TBA

The good:

  • Comes as part of WordPerfect Office 12
  • Lots of templates and media
  • Can mimic PowerPoint's look and feel

The bad:

  • Slow
  • Creates huge, unmanageable files
  • Support for the package is disappointing

The bottomline:

Although its overall slowness is frustrating, Corel Presentations 12 does the job of creating presentations, though neither quickly nor nimbly.

Buying choices:

Users' rating:

8/10

Corel Presentations 12 is a competitor to Microsoft's PowerPoint presentation software, though it's not available as a standalone product. It's part of Corel's WordPerfect Office 12 suite and fits hand in glove with the other applications. Corel Presentations 12 is slow and unwieldy -- it can take up over a gigabyte of disk space with its wide variety of templates, media, sound, and clip art, and it doesn't come cheap. If you're already committed to using Corel's office suite for productivity tasks, then Presentations 12 is fine for the occasional project, but don't go out of your way to get it otherwise.

The Corel WordPerfect Office 12 suite, which includes Corel Presentations, comes on a pair of CDs, the second of which has audio files, photos, and clip art - -perfect for those on a tight budget, though the art appears oddly outdated (it has an '80s feel to it that we think isn't intended to be "retro"). Unfortunately, there's no printed documentation, and we expect few will read the 435-page Acrobat-based manual from cover to electronic cover. To make matters worse, the program's help section is sometimes incorrect. For example, the entry that seeks to explain adding audio clips advises that only WAV files, MIDI files, or CD tracks can be used; in fact, MP3 and WMA files work just fine.

Users familiar with PowerPoint have the option of using Corel Presentations 12 to mimic the look and feel of PowerPoint's interface. While we applaud this ability to leverage peoples' experience with the Microsoft product, we think Corel's own interface is just as good as Microsoft's, if a bit different. Using the suite's PerfectExpert wizards, you'll find templates for creating everything from a budget review to a product launch. Unfortunately, none are shown visually. The interface is familiar because it uses standard Windows conventions, but it adds a pane on the left for customising the look, and it has page tabs at the bottom.

You can get a running start with Corel Presentations 12 by using the outliner tool to start with a series of phrases that can be the basis of the slide show. While the program doesn't provide a media browser, as Keynote and PowerPoint do, the menu items make it easy to place images and audio and video items exactly where you want them. Annoyingly, sometimes they end up offscreen and need to be brought back onscreen. Both Corel Presentations 12 and Harvard Graphics Pro Presentations are able to grab images directly from a scanner or a connected digital camera, which is a great time-saver. The program balked at accepting our AVI file, something the company's tech support people were at a loss to explain. We used a WMA file, and it worked fine.

Once your presentation is all together, you can preview the show, along with all the effects, and save it as a Presentations show, a PowerPoint file, a series of images, or a Web-ready HTML file. Corel Presentations 12 won't let you save it as a video, which Keynote allows, or burn it directly onto a disc, as ProShow Gold can. Presentations 12 is on a par with PowerPoint in its capability to deliver a variety of handouts and scripts for the speaker.

Corel Presentations 12 suffers from inconsistent performance, ranging from poor to acceptable. Many simple operations took half a minute to execute, while others executed instantly or within a few seconds. It even took a few seconds to go from slide to slide, and our completed show required 41 seconds to save and took up a bloated 34.4MB of disk space, about four times larger than the same slide show saved in PowerPoint. Clearly, time is not something that business users have a lot of, and sitting around waiting for the program to do its thing is not acceptable.

Should something go wrong, Corel's support options are limited. The company promises a next-day response to email questions and happily, it came through, unlike with some of the other vendors. The company's Web site has downloadable upgrades, FAQs, and a searchable knowledge base.

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romeo_sorry
18/11/2007, 04:49 PM

rating
8
/10

i have no stinken coments

Pros: how do you download music to powerpoint?
from romeo sorry

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