BrightCarbon is a presentation design agency. We design clear, compelling, and persuasive presentations. We also provide advanced PowerPoint and presentation skills training, and use our visual storytelling skills to create effective eLearning. Check out www.brightcarbon.com for more cool free stuff, and also to see what sales, market, and training presentation support we offer, and our infographics, dynamic animations, and eLearning solutions, as well as advanced PowerPoint and presentation skills training.
Love your work BrightCarbon team; hands down the best add on for PowerPoint out there. I'm not sure my colleagues would think I was as good a PPT designer if it wasn't for BrightSlide <3
I am trying this on a Mac, and I am having no luck. It could be a version type or something, but I cannot select a Google Doc by selecting "new" or even paste the picture into a doc once I open one up. Oh well.
Hey! I'm not sure why that isn't working for you but we use a new method these days, so give it a go! 1. Right click on your image on Google Slides then at the bottom select: Save to keep 2. A new window should appear on the right hand side. Once the image has loaded at the top of this menu (this may take a few seconds), click the three dots in the corner of the image and select Open in Keep 3. The image will open in a new tab. Once it's open, simply right click on it and click Save image as. You can then save the image directly to your computer! Hope that helps!
This is super cool and visually engaging for those who are in attendance. A question, would having multiple copies of the high resolution image make the presentation file too large?
Thanks! Having a few slides in your deck with high resolutions images shouldn't be a problem at all. You can always compress images and remove the cropped areas to reduce the file size if you need to share the deck via email. If you have hundreds of large high resolution images in your deck, then you may well notice the file becoming laggy and difficult to work with!
Hey I need help and I do not know how to google my question. So, my chart has WIDELY different numbers, im comparing deer and chicken nutrients, and the iron bar is at around 4 mg while other bars are over 200 mg, making the iron bar practically invisible since its so small. How can I change the scale of the bars so that they are all still accurate and more visible?
WOW!, been using powerpoint for years and I didn't know this was a thing, thanks a lot for the tutorial. This seems like a powerful tool I could use...