Today is our last week focusing on the introduction
of Microsoft PowerPoint. Some of the techniques to do basic graphic processing
will be included below.
First of all, let’s talk about adjusting the overall
settings of a picture. You can use “tailor” to take off the undesired part of
the picture:
You can either use some advanced
adjustment to fade the picture though there isn’t a function called “fade”. Take
the graph above for instance, if we increase the brightness(亮度) by 20% and decrease
the contrast(對比) by 20%, we can approximately obtain a fade effect:
Sometimes when you need a schematic diagram in your
presentation to convey concepts like the apparatus or a principle, you don’t
need to spend that much time to find a picture that meets your need. You can
create your own one without worrying about the low definition just by combining
fundamental items like this:
and something more complicated like this(maybe some of you have seen this apparatus lol):
Though those pictures aren’t so
beautiful, they’re clear enough to explain ideas. What’s important is to break
the whole picture into parts, and then combine all finished parts altogether.
If you’ve finished all the work on creating and
arranging all the items into a scheme, don’t forget to group them together and
export the final picture as an independent document. By doing this, you can
avoid some unpredictable rearrangements arisen during the copy-and-paste processes.
That’s all for today. Also, it’s the
end of all the PowerPoint sections. I’d like to express my sincere appreciation to
all of you~ In the following weeks, we’ll take strides to another interesting
application to make impressing presentations – Prezi.





Thanks for your sharing~~~
回覆刪除It really helps me a lot.
That is very useful!
回覆刪除I would never forget that physics experiment, which made me stay in the lab about 4 hours... Look forward to your next post about Prezi. It looks extremely cool but I am not familiar with it.
回覆刪除