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Table Of Contents
Chapter 8 Viewing, Printing, and Exporting Your Slideshow 167
 Repeat: Sets the way self-playing slideshows continue to play. Choose Loop to play
the show continuously. Choose “Back and Forth” to have the slideshow run to the
end, run backward toward the beginning, and then run forward again. Choose None
if you want the slideshow to play only once.
 Enter full screen mode when opened: Sets the slideshow to appear on the whole
screen, rather than in a window.
4 For a self-playing movie, you can choose an option from the Repeat pop-up menu.
5 Choose a playback quality and file size from the Formats pop-up menu.
 Full Quality, Large: Preserves the best playback quality, but these movies are large
and are therefore more difficult to transfer through email or the web.
 CD-ROM Movie, Medium: Best if you are using a CD to send the slideshow to
another viewer. These movies are high in quality but have somewhat smaller file
sizes than full-quality movies.
 Web Movie, Small: Movies generally have poorer playback quality but are small
enough to be shared across the web or through email.
 Custom: Choose your own QuickTime compression settings for video and audio so
that you can control the tradeoff between file size and quality.
6 If you don’t want to include audio files in the movie, deselect “Include audio.”
7 If your slideshow has a transparent background you want to preserve in your
QuickTime movie, select “Include transparency.”
Note: Some transitions might not work correctly with this option selected.
8 Click Next.
9 Type a name for your movie, choose a location in which to store it, and click Export.
PowerPoint
You can convert Keynote documents to PowerPoint files that can be viewed and
edited by PowerPoint users on Windows or Mac OS computers.
To create a PowerPoint slideshow:
1 Choose File > Export.
2 Select PowerPoint and then click Next.
3 Type a name and choose a location for the file.
4 Click Export.