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ProblemYou've worked on a presentation for hours. Then it hits: there's a power glitch, there's a computer glitch, PowerPoint throws a silly fit, or maybe you do something a little odd. And you lose all your work. Your presentation gets corrupted, PowerPoint won't reopen it and none of the suggestions elsewhere on the PPT FAQ help. SolutionYou've already tried the suggestions here in the FAQ. If they didn't work, there isn't much else you can do but start over. OK, so you don't really want to hear a lecture from us right now about saving and keeping backsup and all that ... but let's face it, if you'd done it, you wouldn't have this problem now. So please ... from now on: Save. Early. Often. Under a new name each time, so you have a trail to follow back to an uncorrupted version of your presentation. That used to be a nuisance, but thanks to PowerPoint MVP Shyam Pillai, keeping a logically named set of backup files is no more difficult than clicking the Save button. I'll hand the microphone over to Shyam:
Shyam's Sequential Save add-in is free. You can download it here. Search terms:sequential,automatic,save,autosave,auto-save,protect Español Deutsch Français Português Italiano Nederlands Greek Japanese Korean Chinese |
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Free Sequential Save Add-in by Shyam Pillai
http://www.pptfaq.com/FAQ00494.htm
Last update 09 September, 2006