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The 4 Best Free Alternatives To Microsoft PowerPoint

GoFlyKiteNow

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The 4 Best Free Alternatives To Microsoft PowerPoint

Do you create a lot of presentations? If you do, you’re probably a master at PowerPoint, or Keynote if you own a Mac. Microsoft PowerPoint is the standard for slide presentation software and lays the blueprint from which all other applications are created. But what if you’re looking for something new or different?

1. Google Docs Presentation
Favorite alternative when it comes to replacing Microsoft applications is usually Google. You may already be familiar with Google Docs, but did you know you can create presentations with the web-based app? Just click on the Create new drop down menu and select Presentation to get started.

2. SlideRocket

SlideRocket is a higher end model of a collaborative, web-based presentation application. While this is a premium app, they do offer a nice free option, which gives you 250 MB of storage (15 MB file size), up to 5 multi-seat accounts, shared folders, items, and libraries, and the ability to import from Powerpoint and export to PDF.

3. 280 Slides
280 Slides is another very easy to use presentation creation app. Last covered back in March of ’09, 280 Slides offers a host of great features, like the ability to upload your existing PowerPoint presentations and import them into 280 Slides, preventing you from having to start over.

4. Prezi
Prezi, if you haven’t heard of it by now, is one of those really cool presentation applications that is very different from how PowerPoint and the rest function. What makes it significantly different is the fact that it doesn’t invoke the traditional slide-by-slide rules of a normal presentation. Rather, each presentation you create is a flowing, motion-based depiction filled with your creativity.
 
open office lor.

it's free n it works. just need to get use to it.
 
I've been using openoffice for 3 years, lots of improvements and now it is almost like MS Office.
It can also import MS doc for editing (except password doc) and export to pdf without any cost.

OpenOffice is good, solves all the MSOffice+PDF problems all-in-one, free and legal.
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I've been using openoffice for 3 years, lots of improvements and now it is almost like MS Office.
It can also import MS doc for editing (except password doc) and export to pdf without any cost.

There are still some alignment issues with the use of Open Office. You try sending some huge Excel stuff from Open Office to open at your MS Office, u will see the difference.
 
There are still some alignment issues with the use of Open Office. You try sending some huge Excel stuff from Open Office to open at your MS Office, u will see the difference.

Yes, it's true that you wont get a full import without alignment glitches.

First thing I use to check is the paper size and orientation setting. High chance the paper is in US size or Letter which I always reset them back to A4 portrait with 0.75"(L/R) & 0.25"(Top/Bottom). I used to print double side and hole punch them all so the print out have enough clearance from those holes.

With a few practises on re-alignment shortcuts, it'll be your second nature in no time.
 
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