5. Normal View- is the main
editing view, where you
write and design your
presentations. Normal view
has four working areas:
Outline tab, slide tab, slide
pane, notes pane.
6. Slide Sorter view -provides you
with a view of your slides in
thumbnail form. This view makes
it easy for you to sort and
organize the sequence of your
slides as you create your
presentation, and then also as you
prepare your presentation for
printing.
7. The Notes pane -is located just below
the Slide pane. You can type notes
that apply to the current slide. Later,
you can print your notes and refer to
them when you give your
presentation. You can also print notes
to hand out to your audience or
include the notes in a presentation
that you send to the audience or post
on a Web page.
8. OUTLINE VIEW/TAB- features an
outline priority (text based) editing
board with a similar left slide pane as
that of the normal view. This is a great
place to start writing your content —
to capture your ideas, plan how you
want to present them, and move slides
and text around. The Outline tab
shows your slide text in outline form.
9. NOTES PAGE VIEW/TAB- features a slide
preview with some generous space to key in
notes about the slide, you can type notes
that apply to the current slide. Later, you
can print your notes and refer to them when
you give your presentation. You can also
print notes to hand out to your audience or
include the notes in a presentation that you
send to the audience or post on a Web
page.
10. HANDOUTS VIEW- features
a slide preview of how it
would loo on a printed
sheet, you can change the
type of output of your
handouts during the
printing procedures.
11. Slide Show view-is used to deliver
your presentation to your audience.
Slide Show view takes up the full
computer screen, like an actual
presentation. In this view, you see
your presentation the way your
audience will. You can see how your
graphics, timings, movies, animated
effects, and transition effects will look
during the actual presentation.