![]() ![]() While all the options you need are there – things like colour formatting, drop shadows, text alignment, they are squirrelled away behind drop-down menus and tabs. In typical Apple style, Keynote presents you with a sparse, clean – but unfamiliar menu. The first difference between the two programmes (or Apps as we are now supposed to call them) is the set-up of the menus. My challenge was to pitch PowerPoint vs Keynote, to go about creating Keynote versions of BrightCarbon visual slides and document the differences between the process and the results. I’ve used a Mac as my home computer for a long time, and flitted between it and Windows for work. And with that comes the question: ‘Can we do this on Keynote?’ However, precisely as Apple planned – the ‘halo’ effect of the iPhone and the iPad has encouraged more users to bring Macs to work. PowerPoint has been the staple of the business presentation for a good many years, and with the imminent release of PowerPoint 2013 and the inevitable shift towards tablets that Windows 8 will help facilitate, it is likely to be so for a good many more. Can a PowerPoint user be converted to Keynote? Is this the perfect excuse to use Macs more? And how well do they work on iPad? Read on… ![]()
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