Good questions...
I'm using the Package for CD option in Powerpoint 2003 (I think I
mistakenly wrote Powerpoint X before) -- so it has to be the 2003 Viewer.
I thought about the '97 viewer issue at one point, but I think I'm
totally past that hurdle since I'm totally up to date.
However, now that I'm thinking more about it -- is the Powerpoint 2003
Viewer that MS has on their site, actually more recently updated than
the viewer included in the Powerpoint 2003 base program?
> Good questions...
>
> I'm using the Package for CD option in Powerpoint 2003 (I think I
> mistakenly wrote Powerpoint X before) -- so it has to be the 2003 Viewer.
Yes, that would make a difference. PPT 2002's Pack and Go will grab the 97 Viewer. 2003's Package for CD should grab the 2003 Viewer.
> I thought about the '97 viewer issue at one point, but I think I'm
> totally past that hurdle since I'm totally up to date.
Yeah, but I'm wondering if the other person is just opening the CD in Windows Explorer and double-clicking the PPT file there. If so, then it would open in the version of PPT installed on their computer -- and if that version is 97 or 2000, your animations wouldn't run correctly.
> However, now that I'm thinking more about it -- is the Powerpoint 2003
> Viewer that MS has on their site, actually more recently updated than
> the viewer included in the Powerpoint 2003 base program?
mmm, that's a good question. I think, though, that the viewer included in the Office 2003 install CDs is the correct one, and even if it has been updated, you shouldn't be seeing -- well, your friend shouldn't be seeing -- this problem.
You might have that person turn down his/her hardware acceleration, though. That often resolves a number of odd display problems.
http://www.rdpslides.com/pptfaq/FAQ00129.htm for instructions.

Signature
Echo [MS PPT MVP]
http://www.echosvoice.com
presenter, PPT Live '04
Oct 10-13, San Diego http://www.powerpointlive.com
Tom - 24 Jul 2004 17:09 GMT
I think you were right -- the person was not running the packaged show
properly... but double-clicking the ppt and it was running with the
older viewer he had installed. (I tried to explain the proper
procedure, but he wasn't getting it.)
He seems fine now that he runs the play.bat file.
Thanks for your help.
>>Good questions...
>>
[quoted text clipped - 18 lines]
> You might have that person turn down his/her hardware acceleration, though. That often resolves a number of odd display problems.
> http://www.rdpslides.com/pptfaq/FAQ00129.htm for instructions.
Echo S - 25 Jul 2004 01:11 GMT
Ah, glad to hear it. Thanks for letting us know.
--
Echo [MS PPT MVP]
http://www.echosvoice.com
presenter, PPT Live '04
Oct 10-13, San Diego http://www.powerpointlive.com
> I think you were right -- the person was not running the packaged show
> properly... but double-clicking the ppt and it was running with the
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
> >
> > Yeah, but I'm wondering if the other person is just opening the CD in Windows Explorer and double-clicking the PPT file there. If so, then it
would open in the version of PPT installed on their computer -- and if that
version is 97 or 2000, your animations wouldn't run correctly.