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The Sweet Setup

A Beginner’s Guide to PowerPoint on the iPad

create presentation ipad

This is the third in our series of articles about Microsoft Office for the iPad, and the results so far have been decidedly mixed. We found Word to be surprisingly powerful and a good alternative to the desktop version for all but the most hardcore word processors out there. Excel was more of a let down with lots more functionality missing, including many elements that would be notable to even light spreadsheet users. We’re happy to report that PowerPoint is much closer to Word than Excel, and even more than either of those apps, you could use PowerPoint perfectly well on your iPad and never touch the desktop version. In fact, some of the design decisions Microsoft have made might even make you put together better presentations than if you had the complete desktop app at your disposal.

overall design

Our Must-Have, Most Used Productivity Apps

We spend an inordinate amount of time sorting through hundreds of apps to find the very best. We put together a short list of our must-have, most-used apps for increasing productivity.

PowerPoint for iOS is free from the App Store and allows you to view PowerPoint files from anywhere. If you want to edit or create presentations from the iPad though, you’re going to need to subscribe to Office 365 , which runs $6.99/month or $70/year for individuals on up to 5 devices. An Office 365 subscription comes with the full Microsoft Office suite of apps as well was 1TB of OneDrive storage, so there is quite a bit of value there.

Whether this is a fair price is a matter we can only leave to you, but the software package on offer, and especially the 1TB of cloud storage that works across iOS, Android, macOS, Windows, and Linux, makes this a pretty compelling subscription in our eyes.

Of note, Microsoft only requires iPads over 10.1” to pay up to get editing functionality. If you have a 9.7” iPad, iPad Mini, or even an iPhone, then you can use the full version of PowerPoint (and all other Office apps) without an Office 365 subscription. Apparently productivity starts at 10.1” in Microsoft’s world — not that we’re complaining.

Out of the Box Experience

If you start with PowerPoint on the iPad and want to begin building presentations from scratch, the iPad version gives you everything you need to start creating right away.

templates

There are 25 built-in templates you can start with. While not all of them are great, ones like Parcel, Celestial, Ion, and Mesh are all really nice templates that you can use to create professional-looking presentations. Some of them are more fun and offer a more distinct look, but for many people, simplicity is king and the options here are more than capable of making you look good at your next speaking gig.

As you would expect, each of these 25 templates have an assortment of slide types so you can move between titles, lists, and giant images with a consistent experience for your audience.

And if you were worried about getting your content into these slides, fear not because PowerPoint for iPad has tons of tools around adding animations to elements on your slides, transitions between slides, drawing on and marking up content, and adding things like tables, images, icons, and videos into your slides.

Basically, if you work entirely from the iPad, you’ll have more than enough control over everything to put together a presentation that you can be proud of.

Adding Some Flair

PowerPoint has quite a few tools for customizing the feel of your presentations, and while I’d contend that adding too many effects and transitions to a slide deck can be detrimental, these can of course be used well and the fact that so much is here should allow most people to create exactly what they want.

effects

There are 35 ways you can have items on a slide appear or disappear and 17 different ways you can emphasize specific elements on a slide. And if you like transitions, there are a sweeping 49 options for how you move from one slide to another. Should you use all of these? God no. Does this level of flexibility enable a bunch of cool one-off effects? Oh yes!

And then there are a bunch of different drawing tools you can use to add a little panache. Similar to most markup apps you know and love , there are several drawing tools like pencils, markers, and highlighters, as well as a cool cosmic pen that is just fun. You can make this animate into the slide so you can have custom-looking animations that call out something specific on your slides.

Another thing I really like is a feature called Design Ideas. This is found under the Design tab and you can use it on any slide in your presentation. PowerPoint will look at the content of the slide and give you a few suggestions for alternative styling. For example, I had a basic bulleted list and it suggested this nicer layout for a short list:

nicer list - design tab

One of the things I love about how this is set up in the PowerPoint UI is that none of these effects are visible from the main tabs you’ll use when creating your slides. This breaks up the workflow between content and style. You’ll likely find yourself putting together all your content together across however many slides you need and then going back through it all to add whatever animations and transitions you think you need. Again, since the content of a slide deck is far more important than the flair on top of it, this behavioral encouragement is spot on.

Collaboration

As with Microsoft’s other Office apps, the collaboration features from the desktop and web versions are here and they work great. You can work in real time with anyone else whom you’ve shared the document. You can see their edits in real time and they’ll see yours, no matter the platform they are on.

Comments are supported as well, and you or others can leave comments on certain points of the presentation, and there is even version control so you can go back to potentially dozens of versions of the presentation and restore them (or save them as a new copy).

Giving Your Presentation

The presentation itself is the whole reason for making a slide deck — that experience is rock solid — but might be limited compared to what you have on the desktop.

First off, you can present a presentation you created on the iPad on any device that runs PowerPoint, but if you want to present from an iPad, the easiest way to do so is to plug into the screen you are going to be using via a DisplayPort/HDMI/DVI cable that uses Lightning or USB-C (depending on your iPad). After you’re connected to an external display, you’ll see your slides in all their glory on the external display and the presenter view will appear on the iPad itself.

If you happen to be somewhere that has an AirPlay compatible screen (most likely through an Apple TV), then you can also mirror your screen to the AirPlay device and you’ll get the same effect where the slides show on the AirPlay receiver and the presenter view shows on the iPad.

laser pointer feature

Whether using wired or wireless connections for the presentation, you can always tap and hold on your iPad screen to bring up a virtual laser pointer to point out whatever you want to highlight on a particular slide. It’s actually pretty slick and more useful than I expected it to be.

PowerPoint as a Good iOS Citizen

some features

Unlike some other companies who take forever to support iOS’s latest and greatest features, Microsoft has done a pretty decent job of keeping up with the times. Using PowerPoint in late 2019 feels like using an app built to use most of iOS’s (and iPadOS’s) latest features.

Pretty much all the main contenders are here: drag and drop works well and lets you drag in your own media straight from things like Files, Photos, or even Safari and drop them into your slides with ease. The UI for this is rather limited, and you don’t quite know what will happen when you drop something like a photo onto a slide, but you can of course resize and reorient objects once they’re on the slide.

PowerPoint also supports split screen, which is very useful for this sort of app as it allows you to have your research on one side of the iPad and your presentation on the other. I constantly find myself bouncing back and forth when putting together a PowerPoint presentation, and this would be a near deal-breaker for me personally.

The one major iPadOS feature this doesn’t currently support is multi-window. iPadOS 13 enabled apps to have multiple documents open at once and PowerPoint does not support this at all. This is a less egregious omission since most people tend to work on one presentation at a time, but sometimes you might want to reference another presentation that you’ve created or are comparing your slides to ones someone else made.

Overall, PowerPoint strikes a good balance of being unmistakably Microsoft without feeling like a Windows app on the iPad.

Apple Keynote and Google Slides

Apple Keynote vs MS PowerPoint

While PowerPoint is the undisputed standard for presentations, the options from Apple and Google are also compelling and have the distinct advantage of each being completely free. Without getting too much into the weeds here, the short overviews of each of these competitors are:

Apple Keynote lets you more easily create great-looking slides with modern, elegant templates. The app also feels more finely tuned to iPadOS’s UI is a very smooth experience from start to finish. Collaboration is a big issue though if you are not working with others on iPads or Macs. And even if you are, the collaborative editing capabilities are far less robust than what Microsoft has in PowerPoint.

Google Slides is a very minimal presentation tool, but it gets the job done. If your needs are very basic and you value a cloud-based solution with great real-time collaborate editing, then Slides can serve your needs very well. But if you want to have a little more style in your deck, then you’re going to be left wanting here. It’s not the end of the world, but it’s certainly not the best in class.

In short, if you value compatibility and collaboration, PowerPoint is the clear winner. If you value great design in your slides and a delightful iPadOS experience, Keynote is king. And if you just want what is on the web and included in your Google account, then Slides will be okay for you, but you’re probably not going to fall in love with it.

Ultimately, many of us don’t have a choice in the apps we use to give presentations. These usually happen at work and the company has some standard in place for creating presentations, so the choice has been made for you already. If you have any say at all in what presentation software to use, then we think PowerPoint is a great way to make them on the iPad.

create presentation ipad

With a rich set of tools to make everything from basic to wild and flashy presentations possible, it’s bolstered by a robust set of collaboration features as well as the simple fact that it’s the de-facto standard across most of the business world. You’ll probably have little-to-no friction in making this work for you and your business.

If you are working solo or there really isn’t any need to use one app or another, then Keynote is a very compelling alternative, and is the feather in iWork’s cap. it’s an excellent app that makes is dead simple to create professional-looking presentations with very little effort. Oh yeah, and it’s completely free! Not everyone will love this, but it’s definitely something to consider using if you’re not totally sold on PowerPoint.

9 best apps for building presentations in iOS

You can create presentations from an iPhone or iPad, with nearly all the bells and whistles to make them more visual and less boring.

create presentation ipad

Slideshow presentations can be notoriously snooze-worthy. Nearly all of us can remember sitting patiently while someone flipped through a seemingly endless stream of slides. Most people have realized that when it comes to presentations, less is more and being visual is better than putting all of our bullet points in each slide.

Our tools for creating presentations have also taken a big leap forward, and we can even create top-notch slideshows on iPhones and iPads, including the use of effects, transitions, video clips , background music, narration and captions.

Here are nine presentation apps for iOS that can get the job done.

Download.com: Best to-do list apps of 2018 for managing tasks on iOS

Microsoft PowerPoint

Practically synonymous with presentations, Microsoft PowerPoint ( download on iOS ) is a great tool for photo slideshows. Create a new presentation, then add a title and as many slides as you need. Then import your images to PowerPoint and add them to their respective slides. You can then edit and arrange them, add transitions, backgrounds and music. Then play from your device, broadcast to your TV or share via the cloud.

PowerPoint for iOS

Google Slides

The Google Slides app ( download on iOS ) lets you make, tweak, collaborate with colleagues and finally share or present slideshows directly from your phone. Make beautiful slides instantly or customize them to your heart's content. You can also work with PowerPoint slides in Google Slides.

Google Slides for iOS

Apple's Keynote app ( download on iOS ) helps you create beautiful slideshow presentations. Start by choosing one of 30 Apple-designed themes and then replace the dummy text and graphics with your own. Add pictures, videos, interactive charts, cinematic animations and elegant transitions. Collaborate with colleagues in real time over iCloud and when you're ready, present in person or remotely using Keynote Live.

Keynote for iOS

Haiku Deck ( download on iOS ) allows you to easily create wow-worthy presentations on your iPhone or iPad . Get access to more than 40 million free-to-use photos; cool fonts, text templates and layouts; and the ability to create professional-looking charts with basic touch controls.

Work on your presentations across your devices or the web or collaborate with others using real-time syncing. Then present on your iPhone or on the big screen using your iPhone as a clicker.

Haiku Deck for iOS

Adobe Spark Video

Adobe Spark Video ( download on iOS ) lets anyone -- from novices to experts -- create video presentations. Easily splice together video clips, photos, text overlays, music and even your own narration, and the app will handle the rest. Then present your video or share it on your blog or social media account.

Adobe Spark Video for iOS

WPS Presentation, a part of WPS Office ( download on iOS ), lets you create, open and save Microsoft PowerPoint-compatible presentations.

Choose a template, upload your images, video and audio, and add cool font styles, shapes, text effects, columns and tables, advanced animation and slide transitions. After saving, you'll be ready to present via a monitor or a projector.

WPS Office for iOS

Make cool videos with Animoto ( download on iOS ) using clips and pictures from your gallery. Choose from 50 video styles, add music from the built-in music library, photo captions and intro and outro cards, and then share.

Animoto for iOS

RealTimes ( download on iOS ) takes the guesswork out of presentation-making by locating the best parts from your pictures and videos, arranging them, adding transitions and music, and making them easily shareable with the touch of a button. You can also customize your collages, montages and movies with filters, captions and your own music.

Realitimes for iOS

Prezi Viewer

Prezi Viewer ( download on iOS ), the companion to the Prezi web app , lets you practice and present your presentation from wherever you are. Share via emailed or messaged link, or present on your Mac's monitor using Bluetooth . While you won't create the presentation in the iOS app itself in this case, Prezi is such a powerful and unique tool for creating presentations that it still deserved a place on this list.

Prezi Viewer for iOS

Follow  Download.com on Twitter for all the latest app news.

create presentation ipad

  • Slideshow feature joins a slew of new Google Photos abilities  
  • Create beautiful slideshows with these 7 top presentation apps for Mac (Download.com)
  • Salesforce takes on Microsoft PowerPoint with Quip Slides (Download.com)
  • Taking the pain out of building that slideshow deck (ZDNet)
  • Over PowerPoint? Here are 4 ways to create more interesting business presentations (TechRepublic)
  • 10 easy ways to punch up your presentations (TechRepublic)
  • Want to ditch PowerPoint? Here are 3 alternative tools for creating presentations (TechRepublic)

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Art of Presentations

Can I do a PowerPoint presentation using an iPad?

By: Author Shrot Katewa

Can I do a PowerPoint presentation using an iPad?

I love my iPad, and If you are like me, you would want to carry it wherever you go. It is compact, light and allows me to get things done that can’t be done using my phone due to its small size! In fact, it is so convenient that it makes me wonder if I could replace my laptop with an iPad even for my client meetings? 

But, can I create a PowerPoint presentation using an iPad? Yes, you can create a PowerPoint presentation using an iPad. In fact, iPad has a bunch of different apps that allow you to run PowerPoint presentations on it. iPad’s built-in Keynote presentation software also allows you to view the PPT files. You can also install Microsoft PowerPoint to run, edit and create a PowerPoint presentations from scratch on iPad just as you run it on a laptop!

Running a PowerPoint presentation on your iPad is actually a lot easier than you think. There are, however, a few things you should be aware of. Let’s get into the details of the workings of a PowerPoint presentation on an iPad.

How to put a PowerPoint presentation on an iPad?

Sometimes, you may already have a PPT file that was shared by your colleague or a client. However, many a times, it is you who has to create a PowerPoint presentation that dazzles your audience! Creating a presentation that holds our audiences’ attention is hard. We wrote a post that covers the steps that you should be taking while creating a PowerPoint presentation. We’ve broken it down to a step-by-step process that is designed to help you with creating a presentation. (Link – www.owlscape.in/what-are-the-steps-to-create-a-powerpoint-presentation )

If you have already created a presentation using a laptop or any other computer, you’ll first need to transfer it to your iPad. There are multiple ways you could do this. I would like to share my top 3 favourite method as they are free, doesn’t take too much time, and are easy to carry out as it doesn’t require any technical expertise.

1. Transfer the PPT file to your iPad using your email

This is probably the easiest of all the three options. In all likelihood, you may already have received a PPT file from your colleagues through an email. In this case, all you need to do is simply open your email account on your iPad, click on the email that contains the PowerPoint file, and download it.

2. Transfer the PPT file to your iPad using a cloud storage service

Another quick and easy option is using a cloud storage services. There are plenty of cloud storage services such as Google Drive, Dropbox, and even iCloud. Most of these services offer at least a few GBs of free data storage. Simply upload your PPT file from your computer. Then, login to your cloud storage service on your iPad and download the PPT file on your iPad.

3. Transfer the PPT file to your iPad using WhatsApp

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kHShrP6cR88

Video on how to login to WhatsApp on your iPad

Another great way to download the file directly to your iPad is by using WhatsApp. While WhatsApp is a great way to stay in touch with you friends, it is also great to share files. You can ask your colleague to send the file to you over WhatsApp. All you need to do is simply log in to your WhatsApp account on your iPad, open your colleague’s chat message, and download the file.

What is the best app for PowerPoint presentation on iPad?

In our experience, Microsoft PowerPoint is by far one of the best apps to work with PPT presentations on iPad. You can easily download and use, and if you have an Office365 subscription, it allows you access to additional functionalities which come in handy especially if you plan to edit files on-the-go on your iPad. PowerPoint presentation has been the brainchild of Microsoft, and it has been the leader by a long stretch when it comes to the presentation software.

With Microsoft PowerPoint, not only do you resolve the compatibility issues of the PPT files with software, you also get an interface you are familiar with. You can be absolutely sure that PPT file will look exactly as it is intended to when using Microsoft PowerPoint on iPad.

You can download the Microsoft PowerPoint app for your iPad from the App Store.

Is Microsoft PowerPoint app FREE for iPad?

Microsoft PowerPoint Image

Microsoft PowerPoint app is FREE to download and use on an iPad. Microsoft realise that the future of technology is more towards smartphones and tablets. Thus, they have a strong focus on providing access to user files on-the-go. Although you can edit PowerPoint presentations on-the-go, if you wish to get advanced functionalities, you may want to get an Office365 subscription. Having said that, most of your basic editing needs are covered in the base version of the app.

Are there any other apps for PowerPoint presentation on iPad?

Absolutely! There are several other applications that you can use to open and edit a PowerPoint presentation on iPad. All the other applications have their pros and cons. We have listed down the top 3 alternatives to Microsoft PowerPoint on iPad. They are in no order to preference.

Keynote is the native software that offers an office suite on Mac and iOS devices including iPad. It has been built from the ground up for iPad and iPhone devices. Needless to say, it is one of the most powerful software when working with presentations.

While Keynote allows you to view, open and edit a PowerPoint file, the overall functionalities are different. We’ve also seen that the look and feel of the PPT file does change when using it on Keynote. However, the changes are not major and if you are only planning to view the major contents of the PPT file on your iPad, Keynote is effective.

2. Google Slides

The best part about Google Slides is that it allows real-time collaboration on projects with its online office suite. This is great especially when your team is not based in the same location as you are.

Google Slides is also compatible with PPT files. It allows you or open, view and edit PowerPoint files on your iPad. Google Slides is FREE . All you need is a Google account to start using it.

3. WPS Office

WPS office to open PPT files without PowerPoint

Image credit – Mr. Phone

WPS stands for Writer (W), Presentation (P), Spreadsheets (S). It is our favourite alternative to Microsoft Office suite. It has been designed with Microsoft Office users in mind. Thus, the look and feel of WPS Office has striking similarities to that of MIcrosoft Office. For all the Microsoft Office users, WPS Office makes you surprisingly feel just at home.

If you are looking to a cheaper/free alternative to Microsoft Office suite that looks and feels just like MS Office, in our experience WPS Office by far the best option for you. It was designed with Microsoft Office users in mind. It was originally launched for Windows, however, WPS Office suite 2019 version has been expanded to both Linux and Mac users as well.

WPS Office is now also available for Mac and iOS users. You can download WPS Office directly from the App Store or visit the download section on their website . WPS Office is FREE to use although simply signing up for an account with them gives you access to premium feature for 1 year.

What equipment will I need to do a PowerPoint presentation using an iPad?

What makes the iPad really powerful is that it allows you to connect to a projector and project the presentation on a bigger screen. This comes in really handy as this negates the need to carry any laptop. Alternatively, if you consider laptop to be your first choice, instead of carrying an additional spare laptop, you can keep an iPad device as a backup just in case your laptop fails to work. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y0Z6VGNlxbc

Video on how you can connect your iPad to a projector

There are multiple ways to connect your iPad to a Projector. Two of the most common ways are – 

  • HDMI connection
  • VGA connection 

For both the connections, you will need to buy an additional connector cable that allows you to connect the two devices.

Our personal preference is to use the VGA connector. Main reason for this is the fact that a VGA connector allows the sound to be played from the iPad itself as opposed to a HDMI connector. In an HDMI connection for an iPad, the sound is played through your projector. Another reason for preference of a VGA connector over an HDMI connector is that it is more widely available as a default connection option to the projector in most corporate offices. However, connector preference comes down to a personal choice.

So, is it worth it???

We started this article wondering whether we could do a PowerPoint presentation using an iPad, and whether we could carry an iPad to our meetings instead of a laptop. With the availability of Microsoft PowerPoint application for iPad and several other alternatives to open a PPT file on iPad, as well as the possibility to connect the iPad to a projector, we can safely conclude that an iPad can be used as a replacement to a laptop while meeting clients!

Psst… please share!

If you enjoyed reading the article, please leave us a comment below and share this with you network. This acts as a great motivation for us to keep creating useful content for your folks!

How to Play a PowerPoint Presentation on an iPad: A Step-by-Step Guide

Playing a PowerPoint presentation on an iPad is simple and straightforward. Just ensure you have the Microsoft PowerPoint app installed, and you’re good to go. You’ll be presenting in no time!

After following the steps, your PowerPoint presentation will be up and running on your iPad. Whether it’s for a business meeting or a classroom presentation, you’ll be able to engage your audience effectively.

Step by Step Tutorial on How to Play a PowerPoint Presentation on an iPad

Playing a PowerPoint presentation on an iPad involves a few simple steps that will get your slides up and ready for viewing. Let’s dive in!

Step 1: Download the PowerPoint app

First thing’s first – download the PowerPoint app from the Apple App Store.

The PowerPoint app is free to download but may require a Microsoft Office 365 subscription for full functionality. Make sure you’re signed in to your Microsoft account after downloading the app.

Step 2: Open the app and find your presentation

Open the app and locate the presentation you want to play.

You can access your presentations from cloud storage services like OneDrive or Dropbox, or you can transfer files directly to your iPad using iTunes or email.

Step 3: Open your presentation

Once you’ve found your presentation, tap to open it.

Your PowerPoint slides will appear just as they would on a computer. At this point, you can make any last-minute edits or go straight to presenting.

Step 4: Play your presentation

To start your presentation, tap the “Play” icon.

Your iPad will switch to presentation mode, displaying your slides full-screen. Swipe left or right to navigate through the slides.

Step 5: Use additional features as needed

Take advantage of PowerPoint’s features like highlighting or drawing on slides during your presentation.

These features can be accessed by tapping the pen icon on the screen. They add an interactive element to your presentation and can help emphasize key points.

Tips for Playing a PowerPoint Presentation on an iPad

  • Make sure your iPad is charged or plugged in; you don’t want it dying mid-presentation!
  • Familiarize yourself with the app’s interface before the presentation to avoid any hiccups.
  • Use a stylus for more precise highlighting or drawing on slides.
  • If you’re presenting to a group, connect your iPad to a larger screen using AirPlay or an adapter.
  • Practice navigating through your slides on the iPad to ensure a smooth presentation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can i edit my powerpoint presentation on the ipad.

Yes, the PowerPoint app allows you to edit presentations directly on your iPad.

Can I play a presentation without an internet connection?

Yes, once the presentation is downloaded to your device, you do not need an internet connection to play it.

Can I use my iPad as a remote for the presentation?

Yes, with the right setup, you can use your iPad as a remote control to navigate through your slides.

Are animations and transitions supported on the iPad?

Most animations and transitions in PowerPoint are supported on the iPad app.

Can I add notes to my presentation on the iPad?

Yes, you can add and view presenter notes in the PowerPoint iPad app.

  • Download the PowerPoint app from the Apple App Store.
  • Open the app and locate your presentation.
  • Open your presentation.
  • Play your presentation using the “Play” icon.
  • Use additional features like highlighting or drawing as needed.

Playing a PowerPoint presentation on an iPad is a breeze once you know the steps. With the portability and convenience of the iPad, you’re no longer tethered to your laptop for presentations. The ability to edit on the go, use interactive features, and present without a hitch makes the iPad a powerful tool for anyone needing to share information visually.

Remember to download the PowerPoint app, familiarize yourself with its features, and practice beforehand to ensure your presentation goes smoothly. And don’t forget, a well-charged iPad is a happy iPad! So, the next time you need to play a PowerPoint presentation, consider using your iPad and impress your audience with your tech-savviness.

Matthew Burleigh Solve Your Tech

Matthew Burleigh has been writing tech tutorials since 2008. His writing has appeared on dozens of different websites and been read over 50 million times.

After receiving his Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in Computer Science he spent several years working in IT management for small businesses. However, he now works full time writing content online and creating websites.

His main writing topics include iPhones, Microsoft Office, Google Apps, Android, and Photoshop, but he has also written about many other tech topics as well.

Read his full bio here.

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typing on a laptop

8 Things I’ve Learned Using an iPad for Presentations

I love using my iPad for travel to conferences, and not just because it’s so lightweight and its battery lasts all day. For one thing, with the LTE version I’m not beholden to conference Wi-Fi; while some conferences have good connectivity, I never want to count on it. With the iPad I can nearly always get online.

But the iPad isn’t convenient only for attending conferences. It’s a good tool for presentations, too-or at least an excellent backup for a dedicated computer. I can easily be ready to present if I have a last-minute computer replacement.

Still, I had some things to learn the hard way about using an iPad for presentations. Perhaps I can save you a few steps.

The Basics of Getting Started

Learn the differences between “desktop” keynote and the ipad version.

While I present nearly exclusively from an iPad, I usually build my initial presentation on a Mac. I build all of my presentations in Keynote, and store them in iCloud. I can (and do) make tweaks to a presentation on-site via the iPad version of Keynote, but it always feels as though I’m slightly fighting with the software.

Keynote supports a customizable presenter display in both versions. On the Mac desktop version, you can pick three ways to give yourself that during-the-talk cheat sheet, instructing it to show you the current slide, next slide, and presenter notes. On the iPad, the presenter display options only give you a “two out of three” option, between current slide, next slide, and presenter notes. I begrudgingly pick Next Slide and Presenter Notes, and then I hope the venue has a confidence monitor that shows me what’s on the projector behind me.

Some folks prefer to use Powerpoint or Google Slides. This distills down to religion, and I can confidently state that those people are wrong. Both tools offer iPad versions as well, but I’m not well versed in them. Deckset doesn’t offer an iPad version, and I’ve not had much patience for the swath of custom JavaScript-based presentation tools that render Markdown inside of browsers. I want to like them, but I can’t quite get there yet. As a result, use Keynote; you’ll be happier. As an added bonus, the presentations live in iCloud; with a bit of notice you can grab a copy on someone’s Mac, iPhone, or iPad and be back in business should calamity befall your iPad.

Do be aware that this means that if your presentation requires a demo in a terminal or a web browser, you either get to do some awkward transitions—or accept that presenting from an iPad isn’t right for this talk. I still haven’t found a good way to give my “Terrible Ideas in Git” talk from an iPad due to its live demos…

Invest in a presentation remote

A presentation remote is a necessity, unless you enjoy being trapped behind the podium. I treated myself to a little luxury with the  Logitech Spotlight .

This device does it all. It speaks its own wireless protocol via a USB-A dongle that plugs into most laptops, but the Spotlight also speaks Bluetooth with a great range. Its battery charges using a built-in USB-C port that hides behind the dongle, and a single charge lasts for months.

I freely accept that most folks find the idea of paying $129 for a single-purpose device a bit nutty. Those folks generally don’t give double-digit numbers of presentations a year. A word of caution: Don’t leave it behind at the podium after your talk. It’s expensive enough to buy the first time. Please don’t ask me how I know.

Pay attention to fonts and typefaces

I have a condition I jokingly refer to as “typeface blindness.” I can’t tell the difference between most fonts unless I stare at them and actively work out what I’m seeing. I’m told this is atypical, and whenever I forget this fact I get reminded on Twitter. “Well, that’s the fifth talk so far today that uses Helvetica (the system default)” always makes me facepalm. As a result, I make it a point to not use system default fonts.

Contrary to what many folks believe, you can use custom fonts on iOS, but the process is a bit arcane. Do yourself a favor and drop the $2 for  AnyFont . This magic app streamlines an otherwise incredibly painful process.

Lessons I’ve Learned

I’m conservative here; while you can save money by buying third party adapters, I find that minimizing the risk of screwing up a presentation in front of 400 people is worth the extortionate rate that Apple charges for first party adapters. You’ll want both HDMI and VGA adapters. Both of these are available in Lightning and USB-C flavors, depending upon which generation of iPad you’re using. Note that this is less of a concern with USB-C than it is with Lightning adapters—just make certain you test all of your adapters before you leave home.

Save time; don’t bother looking for DVI adapters. The iPad officially doesn’t support it, Apple doesn’t sell them for Lightning, and I’ve only ever encountered it on the speaking circuit once. Your test a few hours before your talk will validate that you’ll be okay.

You can never be too rich, too thin, or have a big enough battery pack

Grab a beefy battery pack, and you can go days without finding a power outlet. You don’t want to discover that the podium power strip is full, the extension cord is a trip hazard, or that you don’t have the right adapter for the country you’re in when it’s time to give a talk. Having a battery pack that can borderline jump-start a car means you’re fine so long as your iPad battery level is anywhere about roughly 3%. (Too much lower and the tablet won’t boot at all.)

I like Anker products for this, but your mileage may vary. I soundly endorse finding reputable brands. Saving a few bucks on chargers, cables, or batteries that (a) plug into a very expensive electronic device and (b) have a propensity to include “sets the building on fire” in their list of failure modes just never seemed worth the trade-off to me.

Note: If you need to give away something at a booth, don’t use branded USB battery packs or chargers, as swag. At best, they’re cheap and feel flimsy. At worst, something with your logo on it started a fire.

Spend extra for an LTE connection

You can tether your iPad to a mobile device or ride on conference Wi-Fi. However, if you’re presenting frequently it’s worth the extra money to get an iPad version that can speak to the cell networks. Suddenly you no longer care what the conference Wi-Fi password is, whether you remembered to charge your phone, or if the captive portal login page is going to expire and pop up again mid-presentation.

Speaking of which…

Before the presentation, turn on both “Do Not Disturb” and “Airplane Mode”

In presentation mode, Keynote swears that it blocks pop-ups, reminders, incoming calls, and other distractions. To its credit, I’ve never seen it do otherwise.

That said, I always enable Do Not Disturb on my iPad. I put the device in airplane mode. And only then do I plug in the projector. Perhaps I’m paranoid, but you’re also not seeing horrible screenshots from my talks that feature embarrassing notifications, either.

Update nothing before your presentation

If a new iOS version or a Keynote update comes out the same week as your presentation, fine. But resist the upgrade. It can wait a day.

There have been enough regressions in software over the years that I’m extremely hesitant to trust that everything will “just work” an hour before I go on stage.

These are the sometimes-hard-won lessons I’ve learned after spending a year giving talks solely from an iPad.

Corey Quinn Headshot

Corey is the Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, where he specializes in helping companies improve their AWS bills by making them smaller and less horrifying. He also hosts the "Screaming in the Cloud" and "AWS Morning Brief" podcasts; and curates "Last Week in AWS," a weekly newsletter summarizing the latest in AWS news, blogs, and tools, sprinkled with snark and thoughtful analysis in roughly equal measure.

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create presentation ipad

Changing of the Guard: “AWS Appoints Matt Garman as CEO”

This morning’s announcement that Adam Selipsky would be stepping down as AWS CEO, with longtime Amazonian Matt Garman stepping into the role, feels like a natural correction. Garman has long been seen as the heir apparent to AWS’s leadership. When Selipsky was named CEO in the last succession, my initial reaction was a baffled, “I’m sorry, who?”

create presentation ipad

AWS’s (de)Generative AI Blunder

AWS has been very publicly insecure about the perception that it’s lagging behind in the Generative AI space for the past year. Unfortunately, rather than setting those perceptions to rest, AWS’s GenAI extravaganza at re:Invent 2023 seemed to prove them true.  Of the 22 GenAI-related announcements, half of them are still in preview. Many were […]

create presentation ipad

Generative AI Builds a re:Invent Scavenger Hunt

Let’s begin with the tl;dr: At this year’s re:Invent, I’m hosting a photo scavenger hunt with significant prizes for “most items found” and “most creative entry.” Sign up through my webapp at findme.lastweekinaws.com. The rest of this post details how I built this app.

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iGeeksBlog

Presentations are a handy tool for students,  teachers , and professionals. Moreover, you can also use them at parties and events because gone are the days of boring slides that fail to retain your audience’s attention. Today, you can quickly create captivating slideshows that communicate your message effectively and engagingly. So, check out these best presentation apps for iPad and iPhone, no matter what kind of project you’re working on in the classroom or the boardroom.

canva iphone and ipad presentation app screenshot

Although Canva is well-known as a graphic design app , it can also help you create spectacular slides for a presentation that will wow your audience. There are tons of professionally designed templates that you can customize according to your needs.

Moreover, you can add your own brand elements like logos and images to create a unified look. The best part is that it is incredibly easy to use, yet gives you impeccable results. You can add your original pictures, illustrations, and text, or choose from the extensive database of design elements that it offers.

Price : Free (In-app Purchases start from $0.99)

2. Google Slides

google slides iphone and ipad presentation app screenshot

Creating top-notch presentations with Google Slides is a breeze. It has a highly intuitive user-interface that makes your work easy. Further, the real-time collaboration feature lets you work with your friends and colleagues. You can add and rearrange slides, format text, and shapes with ease.

Further, you can also open and edit PowerPoint slides right from this app. Another notable feature is that it lets you work even offline. So, if you ever find yourself without an internet connection, your work won’t hit a roadblock. Lastly, Google Slides supports several languages, such as English, German, Italian, Japanese, and more.

Price:  Free

3. Microsoft PowerPoint

microsoft powerpoint iphone and ipad presentation app screenshot

Across the world, PowerPoint has been synonymous with presentations for decades. In recent years, this tool has come a long way. So what better way to get creative than with this official app from Microsoft. It features a range of powerful and customizable slides and templates that will make you stand out.

Moreover, you can use a new AI tool called Presenter Coach that will help you practice your presentation and get real-time suggestions to adjust your pacing, avoid “umms” and speak confidently. Finally, there is seamless syncing with OneDrive that ensures your projects stay consistent across devices.

Price:  Free (In-app Purchases start from $6.99)

4. Notability

notability iphone and ipad presentation app screenshot

This is a renowned note-taking app for your iPad , but it doubles up as an excellent way to share presentations with others and keep your audience engaged. It has a lot of useful tools like ink, highlighter, text, and audio. If you’re working on a compatible iPad, you can even handwrite and sketch with Apple Pencil to bring your projects to life.

Further, the laser pointer makes it easy to direct attention to specific parts of your work. There’s also a multi-note feature that lets you view another note on your device that stays hidden from the audience whom you are presenting to. Not surprisingly, this is a bestselling paid app on the iPad App Store

Price : $8.99

5. Slideshow Creator

slideshow creator iphone and ipad presentation app screenshot

If you want to make a more casual presentation for family gatherings or parties, check out this easy-to-use iPad and iPhone presentation app. It offers various slideshow styles for everything from birthdays and graduation to sports events, invitations, and more.

You simply have to select the style you want, select the photos, videos, and music you want to collate, add text and captions, and then export it into a video that you can share through social media or project on a big screen.

Price : Free (In-app Purchases start from $4.99)

keynote iphone and ipad presentation app screenshot

Here’s the app that Apple itself uses to present brilliant creations to the world. It’s the most powerful app to present your ideas on an iPhone or iPad. In addition to all the basic features, there are advanced options like animated charts and cinematic transitions to add that extra flair with ease.

Further, Keynote Live allows you to present a slideshow that your audience can follow on their Apple devices or online on iCloud.com. Finally, with the built-in real-time collaboration feature, it lets you work with your team seamlessly. Thanks to the Keynote for iCloud, even Windows PC users can collaborate.

7. Adobe Spark Video

adobe spark video iphone and ipad presentation app screenshot

This one’s a video editor app that also lets you create professional presentations. Within minutes, you can put together compelling video stories replete with professional images that highlight your message. You can even select the soundtrack that you like best, and the app will compile everything with beautiful cinematic motion.

Whether you want to inform, persuade, or inspire, your presentations can make an impact with this app. You can even access, edit, and share your video from a browser using Adobe Spark. All this functionality for free is a pretty sweet deal.

Price:  Free (Spark Subscription Monthly – $9.99)

8. Prezi Viewer

prezi viewer iphone and ipad presentation app screenshot

This iOS presentation app makes sure that you outshine everyone else. It’s intuitive and innovative, with stunning animations that draw your audience’s attention to precisely where you want it. You can even access and showcase your work offline if you need to.

When presenting, you don’t need to keep looking behind you because you can see your work on your phone screen too. Moreover, your iPhone or iPad acts as a clicker too! This neat app also supports multiple languages, including English, French, Spanish, German, Portuguese, Hungarian, Italian, Korean, and Japanese.

Summing Up!

So, when are you making your next presentation with one of these apps? Let us know your favorite in the comments below.

You may also like to read these:

  • Best Document Scanner Apps
  • How to convert Keynote Presentation to PowerPoint on iPhone, iPad, and Mac
  • Document Creation Apps
  • Best Project Management Apps

Dhvanesh

The founder of iGeeksBlog, Dhvanesh, is an Apple aficionado, who cannot stand even a slight innuendo about Apple products. He dons the cap of editor-in-chief to make sure that articles match the quality standard before they are published.

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create presentation ipad

Can You Make a Powerpoint on iPad? Here’s How To Do It

Are you familiar with Microsoft PowerPoint on your laptop or desktop computer, but don’t know how to use it on your iPad? You’re not alone.

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With the popularity of tablets and iPads, many people are looking to make the switch and take advantage of the portability of their device.

In this article, we’ll guide you through the steps to create a presentation on your iPad.

We’ll cover topics such as what Microsoft PowerPoint for iPad is, how to add text, images, charts, and other elements, and how to navigate between slides.

With this knowledge, you’ll be able to create a presentation on your iPad with ease.

So let’s get started!

Table of Contents

Short Answer

Yes, you can make a PowerPoint on an iPad.

You can use the Microsoft PowerPoint app for iOS, which is available on the App Store.

You can also create and edit presentations online with PowerPoint for the web.

If you have an Office 365 subscription, you can also use the desktop version of PowerPoint on an iPad with the Office app.

What is Microsoft PowerPoint for iPad?

Microsoft PowerPoint for iPad is an app designed by Microsoft to allow users to create and present their PowerPoint presentations on an Apple iPad.

It is a powerful and easy-to-use tool that allows users to create professional-looking presentations with the help of the iPads touchscreen and Apple Pencil.

The app also offers a wide range of features that make it easy to create engaging and visually appealing presentations.

With the Microsoft PowerPoint for iPad app, users can easily create a new presentation, add text, images, charts, and other elements to their slides.

The app also allows users to use the iPads touchscreen to navigate between slides and add shapes, arrows, and other elements to their presentation.

Additionally, the app allows users to use the Apple Pencil to draw directly on the slides.

The app also offers other features such as the ability to share presentations with others, or present them on a larger screen with AirPlay.

Additionally, the iPads portability and HD display make it the perfect device for creating and sharing presentations with ease.

With its powerful features and easy-to-use interface, Microsoft PowerPoint for iPad is the perfect tool for creating professional-looking presentations on the go.

How to Create a Presentation on iPad

Creating a presentation on an iPad is an easy and convenient way to share information with others.

With the help of Microsoft PowerPoint for iPad apps, you can create a presentation, add text, images, charts, and more to create a professional-looking presentation.

With the iPad’s portability and HD display, you can create and share presentations with ease.

The first step in creating a presentation on an iPad is to download the Microsoft PowerPoint app.

Once you have downloaded the app, you can open it and begin creating your presentation.

You can add text, images, charts, and more to create a professional-looking presentation.

Additionally, you can use the Apple Pencil to draw directly on the slides, as well as use the iPads touchscreen to navigate between slides and add shapes, arrows, and other elements to your presentation.

Once you have added all of the necessary elements to your presentation, you can preview it on your iPad before sharing it with others.

You can also use the iPads AirDrop feature to quickly and easily share your presentation with others.

Additionally, you can use the PowerPoint app to collaborate with others on the presentation remotely.

Finally, you can export your presentation to a variety of formats, such as PDF, PowerPoint, and more.

This allows you to share your presentation with a variety of audiences, from colleagues to clients.

With the iPads portability and HD display, you can create and share presentations with ease.

In conclusion, creating a presentation on an iPad is easy and convenient.

With the help of Microsoft PowerPoint for iPad apps, you can create a professional-looking presentation with ease.

Additionally, you can use the iPads AirDrop feature to quickly and easily share your presentation with others, as well as export it to a variety of formats.

Adding Text, Images, and Charts to the Presentation

Adding text, images, and charts to your PowerPoint presentation on an iPad is a great way to make it look professional and engaging.

With the Microsoft PowerPoint for iPad apps, you can easily add text to your slides by simply tapping on the slide and typing in the text you want to include.

You can also use the iPads built-in dictation feature to quickly add text to your slides, or you can use the iPads on-screen keyboard to type out your text.

In addition to text, you can also add images and charts to your presentation.

You can upload images from your iPads photo library or from an online source, such as Google Images, to add to your presentation.

Similarly, you can also add charts to your presentation by using the chart feature in the PowerPoint app.

This feature allows you to quickly create bar, line, and pie charts from data you enter, as well as customize the chart to fit your presentation.

Finally, if you have an Apple Pencil, you can use it to draw directly on the slides.

This allows you to add arrows, shapes, and other elements to your presentation that would be difficult to add with the mouse or touchscreen.

With the Apple Pencil, you can quickly add any elements you need to make your presentation look professional and engaging.

Using the Apple Pencil to Draw on the Slides

Using the Apple Pencil to draw on PowerPoint slides is a great way to add a personal touch and creative flair to presentations.

With the Apple Pencil, users can draw directly onto slides with precision and detail, as well as directly write text and add shapes.

The Apple Pencil is also pressure-sensitive, meaning that it can be used to draw lightly or heavily depending on the desired effect.

It is also possible to use the Apple Pencil to erase, adjust, and move objects on the slides, allowing for easy editing of the presentation.

Additionally, the Apple Pencil can be used to easily add diagrams and other graphical elements, such as arrows and circles, to the slides.

With the Apple Pencil, slides can be quickly and easily designed to look professional and eye-catching.

Navigating Between Slides on the iPad

Navigating between slides on an iPad is made easy with its multitouch display and intuitive interface.

With a few taps, you can quickly move between slides in your presentation.

To navigate between slides, simply tap the left and right arrows in the bottom left corner of the PowerPoint for iPad app.

This will move you through the presentation slides sequentially, making it easy to review and edit your slides.

Additionally, you can select a specific slide from the Slide Navigator, which can be accessed by tapping the three dots icon in the bottom left corner of the PowerPoint app.

This will open up a list of all your slides, allowing you to quickly jump to a specific slide with just a tap.

Additionally, you can use the Apple Pencil to draw directly on the slides, as well as use the iPads touchscreen to quickly move between slides.

With the iPad’s portability and HD display, you can create and share presentations with ease, making it a great tool for creating professional presentations.

Adding Shapes, Arrows, and Other Elements

Adding shapes, arrows, and other elements to a PowerPoint presentation on an iPad is very easy to do.

With the iPads touchscreen, you can quickly and easily add a variety of shapes, arrows, lines, and other elements to your presentation.

You can use the Apple pencil to draw directly on the slides, allowing you to add intricate details to the presentation quickly and easily.

Additionally, you can use the iPads built-in shape tools to add rectangles, circles, and other shapes to the presentation.

Sharing the Presentation on iPad

Sharing a presentation on iPad is a breeze.

With the help of Microsoft PowerPoint for iPad apps, you can easily share your presentation with others from anywhere in the world.

You can share presentations in a variety of formats, including PDF, PowerPoint, and HTML.

Additionally, you can share your presentation as a read-only or a full-editable version, which allows others to make changes to the presentation if necessary.

The PowerPoint for iPad app allows you to easily send your presentation in an email, post it on social media, or even share it with a link.

If you have an Office 365 subscription, you can save your presentation to OneDrive and access it from any device with an internet connection.

You can also share your presentation with others directly from the iPad, with the ability to add notes and comments while the presentation is being shared.

The iPad also has a variety of other features that can help you share your presentation.

You can use AirPlay to mirror the contents of your iPad onto a larger display, such as a television or projector.

This feature allows you to present your presentation to a large group of people without having to carry a laptop with you.

Additionally, you can use an HDMI or VGA adapter to connect your iPad directly to a projector or monitor.

Finally, you can also share your presentation with others using a variety of cloud-based services, such as Dropbox, Google Drive, and iCloud.

With these cloud services, you can easily store and share your presentation without having to worry about copying it onto a USB drive or sending it through email.

These services also make it easy to collaborate on a presentation, as multiple users can access the same presentation and make changes and additions to it.

By leveraging the power of the iPad and the features of the Microsoft PowerPoint for iPad apps, you can easily create and share a presentation with ease.

Whether you’re giving a presentation to a large group of people or collaborating on a project with colleagues, the iPad provides an easy and efficient way to create and share presentations.

Final Thoughts

Making a PowerPoint presentation on an iPad is now easier than ever with Microsoft PowerPoint for iPad.

With its portability and HD display, you can create professional-looking presentations on the go and share them with ease.

Now that you know how to make a PowerPoint on iPad, why not give it a try? You’ll be surprised at what your creative mind can come up with.

James Wilson

James Wilson has extensive knowledge in the information technology industry.His second love, besides dealing with computers, is smart home technology. He is continually updating information to better comprehend this problem and has a deep understanding of the apartment’s support system.

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Blog / Presentation Delivery / PowerPoint on iPad

create presentation ipad

PowerPoint on iPad: create presentations anytime, anywhere.

Multi-tasking at its finest: update, amend or even create a PowerPoint presentation on the go with PowerPoint’s mobile app for iPad. 

The “digital revolution” has transformed the way we live our lives. We expect global connectivity at our fingertips, no matter where we are or what time it is. The use and development of mobile technology continues to grow in response to this demand. With new technology comes flexibility and the power to respond rapidly to any situation, not only in our personal lives, but in the workplace as well. 

Flexible and mobile working isn’t just a differentiator for companies now, it’s a necessity. Modern businesses are feeling the pull from both clients and employees to embrace this new world of work, and stay relevant, regardless of the industry. While this doesn’t only include mobile technology, it is a significant element of this change.

Professionals who find themselves continuously on the go, travelling from place to place and covering all corners of the globe, can’t be weighed down by inflexible technology. Apple’s iPad was created for just this reason. To give people all the connectivity and functionality of a desktop, on the move. And the PowerPoint for iPad app has opened up a world of mobile possibilities for those people who rely on presentations to share their big ideas.  

PowerPoint on app store

Can you really create a PowerPoint presentation on iPad?

Yes. But that doesn’t mean you should. Let’s make this clear: the PowerPoint for iPad app is a distilled version of the desktop app. Apple has streamlined the functions down to those deemed most important. As well as this, controlling placement, size and direction of elements to the exact pixel is just going to be a lot harder with a touchscreen than with a mouse. You may not have complete control, or the full suite of tools and options, but you can create a PowerPoint presentation that most clients will think looks pretty good. Especially, if you follow our design tips .

We understand that the world of work can be unpredictable. Sometimes, you get a call from that dream client and you just have to drop everything and head for the nearest airport. We also understand that, regardless of how much time you have to prepare for a presentation,  24% of you  still don’t start building until there’s less than a week left. You guys eat danger for breakfast.

If this sounds like you, PowerPoint for iPad may save your butt. You can jump on that plane, hand luggage only, get your iPad out and start building. By the time you land, you’ll have a persuasive presentation that will fool your potential client into thinking you’ve been prepping for months. And, in a way, you have by being an avid  Buffalo 7 blog  reader, naturally. 

Outright Games Thank You Presentation Slide

What if I’m in the 76%?

Firstly, congratulations: you’re our kind of person. Secondly, PowerPoint for iPad is still an effective tool to have in your arsenal. 

Clients can be fickle creatures, constantly updating and changing their demands. And they don’t care for your travel schedule, they expect you to be adaptable to their needs. Even if you’ve created the perfect presentation, weeks in advance, what if they throw you a curveball at the last minute? If all you’ve come armed with is a USB, you’re in trouble.

However, if you’ve got your trusty iPad, with the PowerPoint app installed, and your presentation uploaded to  iCloud , you can update the PowerPoint to reflect their change of heart. 

PowerPoint for iPad is great for delivery

There are numerous unknowns to navigate when it comes to relying on someone else’s tech to deliver your presentation. Perhaps it won’t be powerful enough to run your animations smoothly, even though you’ve  reduced the file size right down . Or they  won’t have the font installed , and your beautiful slides end up looking like a headache-inducing letter orgy. Or their screen configuration might leave your brand yellow looking like a sickly green. No matter how detailed you go with the tech spec questions in advance, there’s always a chance something will go wrong. 

By taking your own iPad to present your slides, you remove all these issues. Ok, this won’t work if you’re presenting to a massive room, but in a small group, iPad presentations can be more effective than a traditional stand and deliver method.

PowerPoint has an option under the  Slide Show  tab, titled  Set Up Slide Show . Under  Show type:  select  Browsed at kiosk (full screen) . This ‘kiosk mode’ allows users to interact with your presentation, similar to a website. 

If you set your presentation up with kiosk mode in mind, you can create a fully-interactive experience for your meeting. This means that you can pass control over to the client, and they can navigate around the slides however they want. Not only will this prove you know your stuff, being able to adapt your script to match the slide they move to, but it will also open up a conversation rather than a monologue.

To use kiosk mode, you need to make sure all your slides have hyperlinked navigation and all your animations are automated, as there’s no ‘click’ function.

If you’ve got the budget, and the space in your suitcase, you could even set the same presentation up on multiple iPads and let everyone in the room have a go. 

Use your iPad as the controller for your presentation

If you are delivering your presentation to a large crowd, you can still control your slides from your iPad. The old-school way to do this is by physically connecting your iPad to the big screen using VGA or HDMI. Alternatively, if the presentation screen is set up with AirPlay, you can project your slides wirelessly.

If you’re using your iPad as a means to control your slides, it’s best practice to set  Auto-lock  to  Never , so it doesn’t go to sleep mid-presentation.

Set auto-lock on ipad to never

Sold. What do I need to know?

There are so many iPads on the market, and they all have the capability to utilise the PowerPoint for iPad app. However, if you want a decent screen size and good power, you’re going to be looking at iPad Pro for the best results, and ease of use. 

The PowerPoint for iPad app is free to install and, if you just want to view presentations, that’s all you’ll need. However, if you want the option to create and edit your presentations on your iPad, you’ll need an Office 365 subscription .

How do I get my PowerPoint presentation on my iPad?

If you don’t have iCloud, there are other ways you can get your mitts on the presentation you so-lovingly crafted on your PC or Mac.

You can use your OneDrive account:

  • Upload your chosen presentation to your OneDrive account from your computer.
  • On the iPad, sign in to your Microsoft account in PowerPoint.
  • Select  Open , then  OneDrive  and drag down the pane to refresh.
  • Select your file and it will download onto the iPad. How long this takes is dependent on file size and wi-fi connection.

Or you can use iTunes:

  • Plug the iPad into the computer and open iTunes.
  • Select the iPad in the top navigation and then go to  Apps  in the drop-down menu.
  • Scroll down to the bottom, where you will find a list of apps that you can add files to.
  • Select  PowerPoint  on the left.
  • You can add files through the iTunes buttons, or drag and drop a file into the space from your computer.
  • Once it has completed copying the file, eject the iPad and you will be able to open the file through the PowerPoint app.

Great, now I know this is an option, I’ll just go back to sleep until it’s time for my flight.

We can’t fight human nature. If you want to use PowerPoint for iPad to create all your presentations moving forward, you do you. We’re only here to advise. How you choose to use this fountain of knowledge is your call. 

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10 Must-Have iPad Apps for Interactive Business Presentations

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Apple iPads and mobile devices have become essential business tools across the globe since their release in the late 2000s.

They serve many useful business functions such as email, messaging, media and many administrative tasks with default settings alone. Combine that with some of the best iOS apps for business optimization, a nd your device will be a business power-house machine. 

Why you need it: iOS currently holds a dominant position in the enterprise world. In 2018, 79% of mobile business use came from iPhone’s and iPad’s, with 41% of that coming from iPad usage.

Check out these five apps to help make and present interactive business presentations.

iPads and smartphones offer efficient solutions to everyday projects in the business world. Expedite any and all tasks, such as note-taking, creating presentations, communication, CRM, file sharing, and many others. Continue reading to see our list of some of the best apps to install on your devices for optimal productivity in the office.

5 Must-Have iPad Apps for Interactive Business Presentations

5 Must-Have iPad Apps for Interactive Business Presentations

  • Prezi Viewer . If you use Prezi to create your interactive business presentations, you can present them with your iPad anywhere. While you won't create the presentation in the iOS app itself in this case, Prezi is such a powerful and unique tool for creating presentations that it’s worth trying for your next presentation.
  • Microsoft PowerPoint . Practically synonymous with presentations, Microsoft PowerPoint is a great tool for informational and photo slideshows. Play from your device, broadcast to your TV or share via the cloud.
  • Google Slides . Make, tweak, collaborate with colleagues, and share or present slideshows directly from any of your devices. Make beautiful slides instantly. You can also work with PowerPoint slides in Google Slides.
  • Adobe Spark Video . From novices to experts — Adobe Spark is a great resource for creating video presentations. Easily splice together video clips, photos, text overlays, music and even your own narration, and the app will handle the rest. Then present your video or share it on your blogor social media account. Just as the iPad and business presentations go together, so do the iPad and the business professional. As a member of the business world, it is important to stay organized, connected and up-to-date on the latest technology. This is where the iPad comes into the picture. T he iPad is there to help organize and complete all of your tasks, ideas and contacts. Check out these five apps for sales and marketing business professionals.

5 Must-Have Mobile Apps and iPad Apps for Business Professionals

  • Microsoft 365 . Log into your Microsoft account and collaborate with colleagues on documents across multiple devices. This cloud-based office suite includes the following apps available for the Mac: Word, Excel, Powerpoint, and Outlook.
  • Bitrix24 . Features a complete set of business tools in a single, intuitive interface. Bitrix24 contains five areas of specialty: communications, tasks and projects, CRM, contact center and website builder.
  • Evernote . Type your notes or scan handwritten notes. Conveniently add anything you need, such as to-do’s, photos, images, web pages, or audio. Notes sync across all devices, making it easy to share with anyone, and anywhere.
  • 1Password . This convenient app remembers all your passwords for you, while keeps them safe and secure. This app makes life easier for you and everybody in your organization.
  • Dropbox . This app lets you back up photos and videos, and access files stored on any of your computers or mobile devices—from anywhere. Share files of any size with ease to anyone with this cloud-based app.

The apps below didn’t make our “Top 10” list, but these mobile apps will surely benefit yourself as a business professional! Give them a trial run and test the m out.

  • Genius Scan . Use the camera on your iPad or mobile device to scan any of your paper documents and export them as PDF or JPEG files with this efficient scanner app.
  • Salesforce . Use the Salesforce app to quickly access your company’s CRM. The app is cross-platform along with offline capabilities. 
  • Pages . This is a powerful word processor for mobile devices. Use pre-installed templates or start from scratch with a blank document. This app is great for creating resumes, digital books, posters and more. 
  • Microsoft Teams . Teams is the perfect app for your company’s collaboration efforts. Meetings, files, messages and apps are stored together in this app. Teams is one of the highest rated apps in the business category on the Apple store!
  • HotSchedules . This scheduling app is a fast and simple way to manage your schedule and team communication. Company employees will love it because they can swap, pick-up, or release shifts with ease on their mobile devices.

How has the iPad been beneficial for your business presentations or as a business professional? What apps do you use on a regular basis? Share them with us in a comment below.

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10 Best Presentation Apps for iPad

Cult.technology.

If you’re looking for the best presentation apps for iPad, you’ve come to the right place. In this article, we’ll show you 10 of the best options for iPad presentation apps that are currently available, along with their pros and cons.

iPad presentation apps offer a number of advantages over traditional presentation software. They’re more portable, for one thing, and they tend to be more user-friendly as well. Additionally, many of these apps offer features that are simply not possible with traditional presentation software, such as the ability to use your iPad as a virtual whiteboard.

So without further ado, here are the 10 best presentation apps for iPad:

10 Best Presentation Apps for iPad:

1. keynote :.

Keynote is one of the popular presentation apps for iPad. When it comes to giving presentations, there is no tool more versatile or user-friendly than Keynote for iPad. This powerful app allows users to create beautiful slideshows complete with animations, transitions, and multimedia elements. And thanks to its intuitive interface, Keynote is easy to use even for first-time users.

Keynote is Apple’s own presentation app, and it’s one of the best in the business. It’s got a clean, intuitive interface and a wide range of features, making it perfect for both simple and complex presentations.

Keynote users can create presentations that are as simple or complex as they need to be. Whether you’re creating a quick presentation for work or an elaborate slideshow for a special event, Keynote has the tools you need to get the job done.

There are many reasons to love Keynote for iPad.

  • One of the biggest advantages of this app is its flexibility.
  • Clean interface
  • Wide range of features
  • Great for both simple and complex presentations.
  • Another great thing about Keynote is its compatibility with other Apple products. If you’re already using iCloud, you can easily share your presentations with other iOS devices and Macs.
  • You’re using an iPhone or iPad, you can even control your presentation remotely with the Keynote Remote app

Though Keynote is a powerful presentation tool, there are some cons to using it on your iPad.

Here are a few things to keep in mind:

  • Formatting can be tricky. Because the iPad screen is smaller than a traditional computer screen
  • The iPad version of Keynote is more expensive than the Mac version.
  • You need an Internet connection to use Keynote on the iPad.

‎Keynote

2. PowerPoint

If you’re looking for a powerful and easy-to-use presentation app for your iPad, then PowerPoint Presentation is a perfect choice. With its intuitive interface and wide range of features, PowerPoint Presentation makes creating and delivering presentations a breeze.

PowerPoint Presentation comes with everything you need to create professional-looking presentations, including:

  • A wide range of templates to choose from
  • An easy-to-use editor for creating and customizing your slides
  • A library of built-in images and icons
  • The ability to add multimedia content to your presentations
  • The ability to share your presentations with others via email or social media
  • Can be used to create engaging and visually appealing presentations
  • Can be used to present on a variety of different devices, including iPads and smartphones
  • Can be used to share presentations with others online
  • Can be used to create presentations in a variety of different languages
  • Some PowerPoint presentation apps can be expensive to purchase
  • May require a monthly subscription fee
  • Some users may find the app difficult to use
  • There may be limited customer support available.

‎Microsoft PowerPoint

3. Google Slides

Google Slides is a powerful presentation tool that offers a variety of features and benefits. One of the major advantages of using Google Slides is that it is very easy to use and intuitive. Even if you are not familiar with presentation software, you should be able to create a professional-looking presentation with Google Slides in no time.

Another benefit of using Google Slides is that it allows you to collaborate with other people on your presentation. This means that if you are working on a project with someone else, you can both work on the presentation at the same time and see each other’s changes in real time. This can be a great way to get feedback and ideas from others while you are working on your presentation.

Finally, Google Slides is a very affordable way to create professional-looking presentations. If you compare the cost of Google Slides to other presentation software, you will find that it is very reasonably priced. Overall, Google Slides is a great choice for anyone who needs to create a presentation.

  • Access presentations from anywhere – Great for collaboration
  • you can easily add images, videos, and transitions to your slideshows.
  • You can also collaborate with others on your presentations, making it easy to get feedback and make changes together.
  • Limited features compared to desktop application
  • Requires an internet connection to use
  • Not as intuitive as some other presentation software options.

‎Google Slides

Prezi is a cloud-based presentation software and storytelling tool for presenting ideas on a virtual canvas. The zoomable canvas makes it easy to present details and structure information in a way that is more intuitive and engaging than traditional slide-based presentations. Prezi’s zooming interface brings ideas to life by providing a more interactive way of exploring them. This makes it ideal for presenting concepts that are difficult to explain with traditional slides. Prezi is also great for storytelling, as it allows you to zoom in and out of your story to provide more context and detail.

Prezi is a unique presentation app that allows you to create “zoomable” presentations. This can be a great way to add visual interest to your presentation, and it’s also very user-friendly.

  • Zooming interface makes it easy to present complex information in a way that is easy to understand.
  • Built-in templates and design tools make it easy to create professional-looking presentations.
  • Cloud-based platform makes it easy to share presentations with others and collaborate on projects.
  • Prezi is a great alternative to traditional presentation software such as PowerPoint.
  • Some users find it difficult to use
  • First, the app is not free to download and use
  • Not as widely used as other presentation apps.

‎Prezi Viewer

5. Haiku Deck

Haiku Deck is an app that allows users to create beautiful presentations. It is simple and easy to use, and it makes creating presentations fun and creative process. Haiku Deck is perfect for any occasion, whether you’re presenting at work, school, or just want to share your ideas with friends. With Haiku Deck, you can quickly and easily create stunning presentations that will engage and inspire your audience.

  • Makes it easy to create beautiful presentations.
  • Simple interface and templates make it easy to create stunning presentations in minutes.
  • Built-in image library and search engine make it easy to find the perfect images for your presentation.
  • Sharing features make it easy to share your presentations with others.
  • Mobile apps make it easy to view and present your presentations on the go.
  • Firstly, the app is not very flexible when it comes to design.
  • There are only a limited number of templates and layouts available, so users may find it difficult to create truly unique presentations.
  • Haiku Deck presentations can be quite image-heavy, which can make them slow to load and difficult to view on devices with lower resolution screens.
  • The app does not have a built-in notes feature, so users who want to add speaker notes to their slides will need to use a separate tool or write them down separately.

‎Haiku Deck

6. SlideShark

SlideShark is a great iPad presentation app for businesses and organisations that need to give presentations on a regular basis. It’s got a ton of features and allows you to view your presentation on any device, even if it doesn’t have PowerPoint installed.With Slide Shark app for iPad is the ultimate presentation tool. It allows you to create beautiful presentations with ease, and share them with your audience with a few simple taps.

With Slide Shark, you can:

  • Create slideshows from your photos and videos
  • Add text, shapes, and transitions to your slideshows
  • Share your presentations with your audience
  • View your presentations on your iPad or iPhone
  • Export your presentations to PDF or PowerPoint

Slide Shark is the perfect presentation tool for busy professionals who need to create great presentations quickly and easily. With its easy-to-use interface and powerful features, Slide Shark makes it easy to create stunning

So what are the pros of using SlideShark? Let’s take a look:

  • View presentations in their original formatting
  • Present directly from your device
  • Access your presentations from anywhere, at any time
  • Share presentations with others
  • Get feedback on your presentations
  • Improve your presentation skills

SlideShark, like all other apps, has its own set of pros and cons. Let’s take a look at some of the main cons of using SlideShark for business presentations.

  • It can be quite expensive to purchase the app outright. Although there is a free trial available.
  • Another con of using SlideShark is that it can be quite difficult to use.
  • The app is not as user-friendly as some of the other presentation apps out there.
  • SlideShark can be quite resource-intensive. The app requires a lot of storage space on your device.
  • SlideShark doesn’t have as many features as some of the other presentation apps out there.

7. ClearSlide

The ClearSlide app for presentation is a powerful tool that allows you to create and deliver stunning presentations on your iPad. It’s got a clean, user-friendly interface, you can quickly create slideshows with photos, videos, and text that look professional and engaging. You can also add transitions, animations, and effects to make your presentation more dynamic. And with its built-in sharing capabilities, you can easily share your presentations with others so they can view them on their own devices. Whether you’re giving a sales presentation, delivering a keynote speech, or teaching a class, the ClearSlide app for presentation is the perfect way to get your message across.

You can rely on ClearSlide for the best iPad app for presentations. Now let’s look at the pros and cons of this app.

  • ClearSlide has a clean, intuitive interface that makes it easy to get started creating presentations.
  • ClearSlide also supports presentation sharing, so you can easily share your presentations with others.
  • You can add slides, images, and videos from your iPad Pro’s library, or from the web.
  • t’s easy to use, packed with features and designed specifically for the iPad Pro.
  • One of the main drawbacks of using the ClearSlide app is that it can be quite expensive.
  • Additionally, the app requires a subscription in order to use all of its features.
  • Another drawback of the ClearSlide app is that it can be difficult to use. The interface is not as intuitive as some other presentation apps
  • This app doesn’t have a built-in tutorial, so you’ll need to find one online if you want to learn how to use the app.

‎ClearSlide Presenter

8. ShoweDeck

ShoweDeck is a presentation app that helps you create and deliver engaging presentations. With ShoweDeck, you can easily add multimedia content to your slides, including images, videos, and audio files. You can also use ShoweDeck to create interactive presentations, using features such as questionnaires and polls. ShoweDeck is a great tool for both personal and professional use.  It’s very user-friendly and comes with a wide range of features, making it perfect for both simple and complex presentations.

  • First and foremost, the app is designed to be easy to use. It has a simple interface that makes it quick and easy to create and edit presentations.
  • There are a variety of templates available, or users can create their own custom layouts.
  • The app also includes a number of built-in features that make it easy to add multimedia content to presentations, such as photos, videos, and audio files.
  • Another key advantage of the ShoweDeck presentation app is its portability. The app can be used on any iPad, which makes it ideal for use in a variety of situations.
  • It is also possible to share presentations with others via email or social media.
  • The ShoweDeck presentation app offers a number of features that make it easy to give presentations. For example, users can add notes to slides, and the app includes a variety of tools for creating and managing presentations.
  • First, it lacks some features that are essential for effective presentations, such as the ability to insert notes or comments on slides or to easily format text.
  • Additionally, the app is not very intuitive and can be challenging to use, especially for those who are not familiar with presentation software.
  • Finally, the app is not compatible with all versions of PowerPoint, which can limit its usefulness.

9. Hypercontext

The Hypercontext presentation app is a great tool for creating professional-looking presentations in iPad. It’s easy to use and has a wide range of features, making it perfect for both businesses and individuals. With Hypercontext, you can create stunning slideshows with ease, adding photos, videos, text, and more. Plus, the app makes it easy to share your presentations with others, making it perfect for team collaboration. So whether you’re creating a presentation for work or school, Hypercontext is the perfect tool for the job.

  • Ease of use : Hypercontext is designed to be extremely user-friendly, even for first-time users. Creating a presentation is as simple as dragging and dropping your slides into the app, and adding text, images, and other content is just a matter of a few taps.
  • Flexibility : Hypercontext offers a wide range of features and options to customize your presentations, including the ability to add notes to slides, change backgrounds and fonts, and more.
  • Sharing options : When you’re finished creating your presentation, Hypercontext makes it easy to share it with others. You can export your presentation as a PDF or PowerPoint file, or even share it directly to social media sites like Facebook and Twitter.

The Hypercontext presentation app for iPad has some cons that users should be aware of before using it.

  • One con is that the app can be glitchy and may not work as intended.
  • Another con is that Hypercontext presentations can be very long and time-consuming to create.

‎Hypercontext (prev. Soapbox)

10. MyndPlayer

MyndPlayer is a powerful and easy-to-use presentation app for iPad. With MyndPlayer you can easily create, edit and share presentations on the go.

MyndPlayer makes it easy to stay organized and keep your presentations looking great. You can easily add, remove and rearrange slides, and add notes to each slide. MyndPlayer also supports iCloud, so you can access your presentations from anywhere.

Whether you’re giving a presentation for work or school, MyndPlayer has you covered. Download it today and see how easy it is to create beautiful presentations on your iPad.

  • MyndPlayer supports both PowerPoint and Keynote presentations, so you can use the app regardless of which program you’re accustomed to using.
  • MyndPlayer offers a number of features that make it ideal for presentations. For example, you can use the app to record your voiceover narration for your slideshows, which can be a great way to add professional-sounding audio to your presentations.
  • MyndPlayer makes it easy to share your presentations with others. You can export your slideshows as video files that can be played on any computer, or you can share them via email or social media.
  • The app includes a built-in whiteboard that you can use to annotate your slideshows in real-time. This can be a great way to add visual interest to your presentations and make them more interactive.
  • The app can be challenging to use if you’re not familiar with presentation software. It takes some time to get used to the interface and learn how to create and edit slideshows.
  • It is not compatible with all devices. If you’re using a PC or Mac, you won’t be able to use MyndPlayer.
  • This app doesn’t have a lot of features compared to other presentation software. For example, it doesn’t allow you to embed video or audio into your slideshows.

‎MyndPlayer

Conclusion:

We have listed down the top 10 best iPad presentation apps with their pros and cons. For more tech updates, do follow cult.technology !!

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How to Create a Slideshow on iPad

Last Updated: February 28, 2023 Tested

This article was co-authored by wikiHow staff writer, Travis Boylls . Travis Boylls is a Technology Writer and Editor for wikiHow. Travis has experience writing technology-related articles, providing software customer service, and in graphic design. He specializes in Windows, macOS, Android, iOS, and Linux platforms. He studied graphic design at Pikes Peak Community College. The wikiHow Tech Team also followed the article's instructions and verified that they work. This article has been viewed 62,619 times. Learn more...

This wikiHow teaches you how to create a slideshow on iPad. You can create a slideshow of an album in the Photos app on iPhone and iPad.

Step 1 Open Photos.

  • Click here to read how to create an album in Photos.

Step 3 Tap Slideshow.

  • Tap the Play button in the same location to resume the slideshow.

Step 6 Tap Options.

  • Tap Theme to change the say the slideshow is presented.
  • Tap Music to change the music of the slideshow, or turn it off.

iPhone Switch On Icon

  • Use the slider bar at the bottom of the options menu to change the speed of the slide show.

Step 7 Tap Done.

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1. Open Photos . 2. Tap the Albums tabs. 3. Tap Slideshow . 4. Tap the center of the screen. 5. Tap Done . Did this summary help you? Yes No

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How to Transfer a PowerPoint Presentation From a MacBook to an iPad

How to delete a registry entry to reconfigure office powerpoint, how to edit documents on an ipad.

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  • What App Is Comparable to Excel for an Apple iPad?

Apple's iPad is capable a wide range of tasks, including building presentations for Microsoft's PowerPoint presentation software. To create a compelling PowerPoint presentation, you'll need an editing app that can handle the format. Apple offers an in-house developed app to fill this need: Keynote for iOS. Based on Apple's OS X Keynote presentation software, this app can build, edit and view PowerPoint presentations, as well as a number of other formats like Apple's KEY presentation format.

Keynote Features

Keynote for iOS is compatible with all iOS platforms, including the iPad. Keynote for iOS enables you to build fully-featured PowerPoint-compatible presentations, including pictures, videos and sound. It also features over 30 transitions and effects for both objects and text to help give your presentations some panache. The program was designed with multi-touch interfaces in mind and so features many tools that play into this interface like one-touch edits and rulers to guide image placement. Keynote for iOS also has a number of chart and graphing tools to enhance the presentation of data.

PowerPoint Compatibility

Keynote not only makes presentations in its proprietary KEY format but also in the widely used Microsoft PowerPoint PPT format. These presentations can be viewed on PowerPoint-compatible software on any platform, making Keynote a useful app if you need to compose a presentation on the go. Keynote can also import PowerPoint presentations and edit them, although some data like fonts and transitions not available on the iPad or in Keynote may be lost.

ICloud and Sharing With Keynote

With support for iCloud in Keynote for iOS, the presentation file is pushed to all iCloud-enabled devices set to receive. Updates made to the files are also pushed to other devices, with changes saved automatically as you work to preserve your progress should something go awry. Keynote also features numerous sharing options to help distribute your presentation to everyone who needs it. A link can be shared via email, iTunes, WebDAV and AirDrop.

Keynote Drawbacks

Keynote for iOS isn't a perfect app for PowerPoint creation or editing. Any formatting details not available on Keynote for iOS or the iPad, like fonts, transitions or other effects, won't carry over during importing and editing. While Keynote has a good set of features, this lack of compatibility with other features in the OS X version of Keynote and PowerPoint leaves the app somewhat limited.

Alternatives

If Keynote isn't a viable or appealing option, there are a few other PowerPoint builders available for the iPad. Macworld lists Documents To Go Premium, Office 2 HD, Polaris Office, Quickoffice Pro HD and Smart Office 2 as viable third-party alternatives. Macworld also lists a virtual copy of Microsoft PowerPoint as an option, by using a cloud-based Windows server from an app like CloudOn, Nivio or OnLive desktop. You can also connect to a virtual version of the PowerPoint-compatible OpenOffice.org in a similar fashion through AlwaysOnPC Personal Cloud Desktop.

  • Apple: Keynote for iOS
  • Macworld: Editing PowerPoint Documents on an iPad

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Create moving, zooming presentations that grab attention and keep it.

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Appear right alongside your content while presenting to your audience.

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Make stunning interactive charts, reports, maps, infographics, and more.

Where will you take your audience today?

View, practice, and present anywhere with our free Prezi Viewer app for iOS and Android.

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Download your presentation to your phone or tablet. Practice en route to the big meeting. Pitch to the prospect you meet on the flight home. Take Prezi anywhere. Even when there's no wi-fi.

Prezi helps me convey complex points and wow my audience with sumptuous visuals. It’s a great way to stand out during presentations that really matter.

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Collaborate and comment in a single real-time file. Share your presentation using a simple link. Control who sees it even after you send it out.

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Create a new presentation with Copilot in PowerPoint

Note:  This feature is available to customers with a Copilot for Microsoft 365 license or Copilot Pro license.

Create a new presentation in PowerPoint.

Screenshot of the Copilot in PowerPoint button in the ribbon menu

Select Send . Copilot will draft a presentation for you!

Edit the presentation to suit your needs, ask Copilot to add a slide , or start over with a new presentation and refine your prompt to include more specifics. For example, "Create a presentation about hybrid meeting best practices that includes examples for team building.”

Create a presentation with a template

Note:  This feature is only available to customers with a Copilot for Microsoft 365 (work) license. It is not currently available to customers with a Copilot Pro (home) license.

Copilot can use your existing themes and templates to create a presentation. Learn more about making your presentations look great with Copilot in PowerPoint .

Selecting a theme for a new presentation on Office.com.

Enter your prompt or select Create presentation from file to create a first draft of your presentation using your theme or template.

Screenshot of a warning in Copilot in PowerPoint about how creating a new presentation will replace existing slides

Edit the presentation to suit your needs, ask Copilot to add a slide , organize your presentation, or add images.

Create a presentation from a file with Copilot

Note:  This feature is only available to customers with a Copilot for Microsoft 365 (work) license. It is not currently available to customers with a Copilot Pro (home) license.

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With Copilot in PowerPoint, you can create a presentation from an existing Word document. Point Copilot in PowerPoint to your Word document, and it will generate slides, apply layouts, create speaker notes, and choose a theme for you.

Screenshot of the Copilot in PowerPoint prompt menu with Create a presentation from file option highlighted

Select the Word document you want from the picker that appears. If you don't see the document you want, start typing any part of the filename to search for it.

Note:  If the file picker doesn't appear type a front slash (/) to cause it to pop up.

Best practices when creating a presentation from a Word document

Leverage word styles to help copilot understand the structure of your document.

By using Styles in Word to organize your document, Copilot will better understand your document structure and how to break it up into slides of a presentation. Structure your content under Titles and Headers when appropriate and Copilot will do its best to generate a presentation for you.

Include images that are relevant to your presentation

When creating a presentation, Copilot will try to incorporate the images in your Word document. If you have images that you would like to be brought over to your presentation, be sure to include them in your Word document.

Start with your organization’s template

If your organization uses a standard template, start with this file before creating a presentation with Copilot. Starting with a template will let Copilot know that you would like to retain the presentation’s theme and design. Copilot will use existing layouts to build a presentation for you. Learn more about Making your presentations look great with Copilot in PowerPoint .

Tip:  Copilot works best with Word documents that are less than 24 MB.

Welcome to Copilot in PowerPoint

Frequently Asked Questions about Copilot in PowerPoint

Where can I get Microsoft Copilot?

Copilot Lab - Start your Copilot journey

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How-To Geek

6 ways to create more interactive powerpoint presentations.

Engage your audience with cool, actionable features.

Quick Links

  • Add a QR code
  • Embed Microsoft Forms (Education or Business Only)
  • Embed a Live Web Page
  • Add Links and Menus
  • Add Clickable Images to Give More Info
  • Add a Countdown Timer

We've all been to a presentation where the speaker bores you to death with a mundane PowerPoint presentation. Actually, the speaker could have kept you much more engaged by adding some interactive features to their slideshow. Let's look into some of these options.

1. Add a QR code

Adding a QR code can be particularly useful if you want to direct your audience to an online form, website, or video.

Some websites have in-built ways to create a QR code. For example, on Microsoft Forms , when you click "Collect Responses," you'll see the QR code option via the icon highlighted in the screenshot below. You can either right-click the QR code to copy and paste it into your presentation, or click "Download" to add it to your device gallery to insert the QR code as a picture.

In fact, you can easily add a QR code to take your viewer to any website. On Microsoft Edge, right-click anywhere on a web page where there isn't already a link, and left-click "Create QR Code For This Page."

You can also create QR codes in other browsers, such as Chrome.

You can then copy or download the QR code to use wherever you like in your presentation.

2. Embed Microsoft Forms (Education or Business Only)

If you plan to send your PPT presentation to others—for example, if you're a trainer sending step-by-step instruction presentation, a teacher sending an independent learning task to your students, or a campaigner for your local councilor sending a persuasive PPT to constituents—you might want to embed a quiz, questionnaire, pole, or feedback survey in your presentation.

In PowerPoint, open the "Insert" tab on the ribbon, and in the Forms group, click "Forms". If you cannot see this option, you can add new buttons to the ribbon .

As at April 2024, this feature is only available for those using their work or school account. We're using a Microsoft 365 Personal account in the screenshot below, which is why the Forms icon is grayed out.

Then, a sidebar will appear on the right-hand side of your screen, where you can either choose a form you have already created or opt to craft a new form.

Now, you can share your PPT presentation with others , who can click the fields and submit their responses when they view the presentation.

3. Embed a Live Web Page

You could always screenshot a web page and paste that into your PPT, but that's not a very interactive addition to your presentation. Instead, you can embed a live web page into your PPT so that people with access to your presentation can interact actively with its contents.

To do this, we will need to add an add-in to our PPT account .

Add-ins are not always reliable or secure. Before installing an add-in to your Microsoft account, check that the author is a reputable company, and type the add-in's name into a search engine to read reviews and other users' experiences.

To embed a web page, add the Web Viewer add-in ( this is an add-in created by Microsoft ).

Go to the relevant slide and open the Web Viewer add-in. Then, copy and paste the secure URL into the field box, and remove https:// from the start of the address. In our example, we will add a selector wheel to our slide. Click "Preview" to see a sample of the web page's appearance in your presentation.

This is how ours will look.

When you or someone with access to your presentation views the slideshow, this web page will be live and interactive.

4. Add Links and Menus

As well as moving from one slide to the next through a keyboard action or mouse click, you can create links within your presentation to direct the audience to specific locations.

To create a link, right-click the outline of the clickable object, and click "Link."

In the Insert Hyperlink dialog box, click "Place In This Document," choose the landing destination, and click "OK."

What's more, to make it clear that an object is clickable, you can use action buttons. Open the "Insert" tab on the ribbon, click "Shape," and then choose an appropriate action button. Usefully, PPT will automatically prompt you to add a link to these shapes.

You might also want a menu that displays on every slide. Once you have created the menu, add the links using the method outlined above. Then, select all the items, press Ctrl+C (copy), and then use Ctrl+V to paste them in your other slides.

5. Add Clickable Images to Give More Info

Through PowerPoint's animations, you can give your viewer the power to choose what they see and when they see it. This works nicely whether you're planning to send your presentation to others to run through independently or whether you're presenting in front of a group and want your audience to decide which action they want to take.

Start by creating the objects that will be clickable (trigger) and the items that will appear (pop-up).

Then, select all the pop-ups together. When you click "Animations" on the ribbon and choose an appropriate animation for the effect you want to achieve, this will be applied to all objects you have selected.

The next step is to rename the triggers in your presentation. To do this, open the "Home" tab, and in the Editing group, click "Select", and then "Selection Pane."

With the Selection Pane open, select each trigger on your slide individually, and rename them in the Selection Pane, so that they can be easily linked to in the next step.

Finally, go back to the first pop-up. Open the "Animations" tab, and in the Advanced Animation group, click the "Trigger" drop-down arrow. Then, you can set the item to appear when a trigger is clicked in your presentation.

If you want your item to disappear when the trigger is clicked again, select the pop-up, click "Add Animation" in the Advanced Animation group, choose an Exit animation, and follow the same step to link that animation to the trigger button.

6. Add a Countdown Timer

A great way to get your audience to engage with your PPT presentation is to keep them on edge by adding a countdown timer. Whether you're leading a presentation and want to let your audience stop to discuss a topic, or running an online quiz with time-limit questions, having a countdown timer means your audience will keep their eye on your slide throughout.

To do this, you need to animate text boxes or shapes containing your countdown numbers. Choose and format a shape and type the highest number that your countdown clock will need. In our case, we're creating a 10-second timer.

Now, with your shape selected, open the "Animations" tab on the ribbon and click the animation drop-down arrow. Then, in the Exit menu, click "Disappear."

Open the Animation Pane, and click the drop-down arrow next to the animation you've just added. From there, choose "Timing."

Make sure "On Click" is selected in the Start menu, and change the Delay option to "1 second," before clicking "OK."

Then, with this shape still selected, press Ctrl+C (copy), and then Ctrl+V (paste). In the second box, type 9 . With the Animation Pane still open and this second shape selected, click the drop-down arrow and choose "Timing" again. Change the Start option to "After Previous," and make sure the Delay option is 1 second. Then, click "OK."

We can now use this second shape as our template, as when we copy and paste it again, the animations will also duplicate. With this second shape selected, press Ctrl+C and Ctrl+V, type 8 into the box, and continue to do the same until you get to 0 .

Next, remove the animations from the "0" box, as you don't want this to disappear. To do this, click the shape, and in the Animation Pane drop-down, click "Remove."

You now need to layer them in order. Right-click the box containing number 1, and click "Bring To Front." You will now see that box on the top. Do the same with the other numbers in ascending order.

Finally, you need to align the objects together. Click anywhere on your slide and press Ctrl+A. Then, in the Home tab on the ribbon, click "Arrange." First click "Align Center," and then bring the menu up again, so that you can click "Align Middle."

Press Ctrl+A again to select your timer, and you can then move your timer or copy and paste it elsewhere.

Press F5 to see the presentation in action, and when you get to the slide containing the timer, click anywhere on the slide to see your countdown timer in action!

Now that your PPT presentation is more interactive, make sure you've avoided these eight common presentational mistakes before you present your slides.

Apple unveils stunning new iPad Pro with the world’s most advanced display, M4 chip, and Apple Pencil Pro

The new iPad Pro.

Thinnest Apple Product Ever

A side profile of iPad Pro showing its thinness.

World’s Most Advanced Display

The Ultra Retina XDY display showcasing beautiful landscape scenery on the new iPad Pro.

Only Possible with M4

The Octane app disabled on iPad Pro.

Outrageously Powerful Device for AI

Pro Cameras

A close up look at the pro camera system on the new iPad Pro.

Pro Connectivity

Apple Pencil Pro

The Apple Pencil Pro attached to the new iPad Pro.

All-New Magic Keyboard and Smart Folio

Powerful iPadOS Features

Reference Mode on iPad Pro.

Logic Pro for iPad 2

Session Players in Logic Pro for iPad 2 displayed on iPad Pro.

Final Cut Pro for iPad 2

Live Multicam in Final Cut Pro for iPad 2 displayed on iPad Pro.

iPad Pro and the Environment

  • Customers can order the new iPad Pro with M4 starting today, May 7, at apple.com/store , and in the Apple Store app in 29 countries and regions, including the U.S., with availability in stores beginning Wednesday, May 15.
  • The new 11-inch and 13-inch iPad Pro will be available in silver and space black finishes in 256GB, 512GB, 1TB, and 2TB configurations.
  • The 11-inch iPad Pro starts at  $999  (U.S.) for the Wi-Fi model, and  $1,199  (U.S.) for the Wi-Fi + Cellular model. The 13-inch iPad Pro starts at  $1,299  (U.S.) for the Wi-Fi model, and  $1,499  (U.S.) for the Wi-Fi + Cellular model. Additional technical specifications, including nano-texture glass options, are available at apple.com/store .
  • For education, the new 11-inch iPad Pro is available for  $899  (U.S.) and the 13-inch iPad Pro is $1,199 (U.S.). Education pricing is available to current and newly accepted college students and their parents, as well as faculty, staff, and home-school teachers of all grade levels. For more information, visit  apple.com/us-hed/shop .
  • The new Apple Pencil Pro is compatible with the new iPad Pro. It is available for $129 (U.S.). For education, Apple Pencil Pro is available for $119 (U.S.).
  • Apple Pencil (USB-C) is compatible with the new iPad Pro. It is available for $79 (U.S.) and $69 (U.S.) for education.
  • The new Magic Keyboard is compatible with the new iPad Pro. It is available in black and white finishes. The new 11-inch Magic Keyboard is available for $299 (U.S.) and the new 13-inch Magic Keyboard is available for $349 (U.S.), with layouts for over 30 languages. For education, the 11-inch Magic Keyboard is available for $279 (U.S.) and the 13-inch Magic Keyboard is available for $329 (U.S.).
  • The new Smart Folio is available for $79 (U.S.) in black, white, and denim finishes for the new 11-inch iPad Pro and $99 (U.S.) for the new 13-inch iPad Pro.
  • Logic Pro for iPad 2 is available on May 13 as a free update for existing users, and for new users, it is available on the App Store for $4.99 (U.S.) per month, or $49 (U.S.) per year, with a one-month free trial. Logic Pro for iPad 2 requires iPadOS 17.4 or later. For more information, visit apple.com/logic-pro-for-ipad .
  • Final Cut Pro for iPad 2 will be available later this spring on the App Store for $4.99 (U.S.) per month, or $49 (U.S.) per year, with a one-month free trial.
  • Apple offers great ways to save on the latest iPad. Customers can trade in their current iPad and get credit toward a new one by visiting the Apple Store online , the Apple Store app, or an Apple Store location. To see what their device is worth, and for terms and conditions, customers can visit apple.com/shop/trade-in .
  • Customers in the U.S. who shop at Apple using Apple Card can pay monthly at 0 percent APR when they choose to check out with Apple Card Monthly Installments, and they’ll get 3 percent Daily Cash back — all upfront.

Text of this article

May 7, 2024

PRESS RELEASE

Featuring a new thin and light design, breakthrough Ultra Retina XDR display, and outrageously fast M4 performance with powerful AI capabilities, the new iPad Pro takes a huge leap forward

CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA Apple today unveiled the groundbreaking new iPad Pro in a stunningly thin and light design, taking portability and performance to the next level. Available in silver and space black finishes, the new iPad Pro comes in two sizes: an expansive 13-inch model and a super-portable 11-inch model. Both sizes feature the world’s most advanced display — a new breakthrough Ultra Retina XDR display with state-of-the-art tandem OLED technology — providing a remarkable visual experience. The new iPad Pro is made possible with the new M4 chip, the next generation of Apple silicon, which delivers a huge leap in performance and capabilities. M4 features an entirely new display engine to enable the precision, color, and brightness of the Ultra Retina XDR display. With a new CPU, a next-generation GPU that builds upon the GPU architecture debuted on M3, and the most powerful Neural Engine yet, the new iPad Pro is an outrageously powerful device for artificial intelligence. The versatility and advanced capabilities of iPad Pro are also enhanced with all-new accessories. Apple Pencil Pro brings powerful new interactions that take the pencil experience even further, and a new thinner, lighter Magic Keyboard is packed with incredible features. The new iPad Pro, Apple Pencil Pro, and Magic Keyboard are available to order starting today, with availability in stores beginning Wednesday, May 15.

“iPad Pro empowers a broad set of pros and is perfect for anyone who wants the ultimate iPad experience — with its combination of the world’s best displays, extraordinary performance of our latest M-series chips, and advanced accessories — all in a portable design. Today, we’re taking it even further with the new, stunningly thin and light iPad Pro, our biggest update ever to iPad Pro,” said John Ternus, Apple’s senior vice president of Hardware Engineering. “With the breakthrough Ultra Retina XDR display, the next-level performance of M4, incredible AI capabilities, and support for the all-new Apple Pencil Pro and Magic Keyboard, there’s no device like the new iPad Pro.”

The new iPad Pro — the thinnest Apple product ever — features a stunningly thin and light design, taking portability to a whole new level. The 11-inch model is just 5.3 mm thin, and the 13-inch model is even thinner at a striking 5.1 mm, while both models are just as strong as the previous design. The 11-inch model weighs less than a pound, and the 13-inch model is nearly a quarter pound lighter than its predecessor — allowing pro users to extend their workflows in new ways and in more places. The new iPad Pro is available in two gorgeous finishes — silver and space black — both with 100 percent recycled aluminum enclosures.

The new iPad Pro debuts the Ultra Retina XDR, the world’s most advanced display, to provide an even more remarkable visual experience. The Ultra Retina XDR display features state-of-the-art tandem OLED technology that uses two OLED panels and combines the light from both to provide phenomenal full-screen brightness. The new iPad Pro supports an incredible 1000 nits of full-screen brightness for SDR and HDR content, and 1600 nits peak for HDR. No other device of its kind delivers this level of extreme dynamic range. Tandem OLED technology enables sub-millisecond control over the color and luminance of each pixel, taking XDR precision further than ever. Specular highlights in photos and video appear even brighter, and there’s more detail in shadows and low light than ever before on iPad — all while delivering even more responsiveness to content in motion. For pro users working in high-end, color-managed workflows or challenging lighting conditions, a new nano-texture glass option comes to iPad Pro for the first time. 1 Nano-texture glass is precisely etched at a nanometer scale, maintaining image quality and contrast while scattering ambient light for reduced glare. With its breakthrough tandem OLED technology, extreme brightness, incredibly precise contrast, brilliant colors, and nano-texture glass option, the new Ultra Retina XDR display is the world’s most advanced display, giving iPad Pro customers an unparalleled viewing experience.

The incredibly thin and light design and game-changing display of the new iPad Pro is only possible with M4, the next generation of Apple silicon that delivers a huge leap in performance. M4 is built on second-generation 3-nanometer technology that’s even more power efficient, which is perfect for the design of the new iPad Pro. With an entirely new display engine, M4 introduces pioneering technology for the stunning precision, color, and brightness of the Ultra Retina XDR display. The new CPU offers up to four performance cores and now six efficiency cores, 2 with next-generation machine learning (ML) accelerators, to deliver up to 1.5x faster CPU performance over M2 in the previous-generation iPad Pro. 3 M4 builds on the GPU architecture of M3 — the 10-core GPU includes powerful features like Dynamic Caching, and hardware-accelerated mesh shading and ray tracing, which come to iPad for the first time. Coupled with higher unified memory bandwidth, pro rendering apps like Octane will see up to 4x faster performance than M2. 3 M4 also delivers tremendous gains and industry-leading performance per watt. Compared to M2, M4 can deliver the same performance using just half the power, and compared to the latest PC chip in a thin and light laptop, M4 can deliver the same performance using just a quarter of the power. 4 A new advanced Media Engine includes support for AV1 decode, providing more power-efficient playback of high-resolution video experiences from streaming services.

The new iPad Pro with M4 features Apple’s most powerful Neural Engine ever, capable of 38 trillion operations per second, which is 60x faster than Apple’s first Neural Engine in the A11 Bionic chip. Combined with next-generation ML accelerators in the CPU, a high-performance GPU, more memory bandwidth, and intelligent features and powerful developer frameworks in iPadOS, the Neural Engine makes the new iPad Pro an outrageously powerful device for AI. With iPad Pro with M4, users can perform AI-enabled tasks even faster, like easily isolate a subject from its background in 4K video with just a tap with Scene Removal Mask in Final Cut Pro. With this advanced level of performance, the Neural Engine in M4 is more powerful than any neural processing unit in any AI PC today.

iPadOS also has advanced frameworks like Core ML that make it easy for developers to tap into the Neural Engine to deliver phenomenal AI features locally, including running powerful diffusion and generative AI models, with great performance on device. iPad Pro also supports cloud-based solutions, enabling users to run powerful productivity and creative apps that tap into the power of AI, such as Copilot for Microsoft 365 and Adobe Firefly.

The updated camera system on the new iPad Pro delivers even more versatility, and with its rich audio from four studio-quality mics, users can shoot, edit, and share all on one device. The 12MP back camera captures vibrant Smart HDR images and video with even better color, improved textures, and detail in low light. It also now features a new adaptive True Tone flash that makes document scanning on the new iPad Pro better than ever. Using AI, the new iPad Pro automatically identifies documents right in the Camera app, and if a shadow is in the way, it instantly takes multiple photos with the new adaptive flash, stitching the scan together for a dramatically better scan.

On the front, the TrueDepth camera system moves to the landscape location on the new iPad Pro. The Ultra Wide 12MP camera with Center Stage makes the experience of video conferencing in landscape orientation even better, especially when iPad is attached to a Magic Keyboard or Smart Folio.

iPad Pro includes a high-performance USB-C connector with support for Thunderbolt 3 and USB 4, delivering fast wired connectivity — up to 40Gb/s. Thunderbolt supports an extensive ecosystem of high-performance accessories, including external displays like the Pro Display XDR at its full 6K resolution, and external storage, all connected using high-performance cables and docks. iPad Pro supports Wi-Fi 6E for super-fast Wi-Fi connections for pro workflows on the go. Wi-Fi + Cellular models with 5G allow users to access their files, communicate with colleagues, and back up their data in a snap while on the go. Cellular models of the new iPad Pro are activated with eSIM, a more secure alternative to a physical SIM card, allowing users to quickly connect and transfer their existing plans digitally, and store multiple cellular plans on a single device. Customers can easily get connected to wireless data plans on the new iPad Pro in over 190 countries and regions around the world without needing to get a physical SIM card from a local carrier.

Apple Pencil Pro features even more magical capabilities and powerful new interactions that take the Apple Pencil experience even further. A new sensor in the barrel can sense a user’s squeeze, bringing up a tool palette to quickly switch tools, line weights, and colors, all without interrupting the creative process. A custom haptic engine delivers a light tap that provides confirmation when users squeeze, use double-tap, or snap to a Smart Shape for a remarkably intuitive experience. A gyroscope allows users to roll Apple Pencil Pro for precise control of the tool they’re using. Rotating the barrel changes the orientation of shaped pen and brush tools, just like pen and paper. And with Apple Pencil hover, users can visualize the exact orientation of a tool before making a mark.

With these advanced features, Apple Pencil Pro allows users to bring their ideas to life in entirely new ways, and developers can also create their own custom interactions. Apple Pencil Pro brings support for Find My for the first time to Apple Pencil, helping users locate Apple Pencil Pro if misplaced. It pairs, charges, and is stored on the side of iPad Pro through a new magnetic interface. iPad Pro also supports Apple Pencil (USB-C), ideal for note taking, sketching, annotating, journaling, and more, at an incredible value.

Designed for the new iPad Pro, an all-new thinner and lighter Magic Keyboard makes it more portable and versatile than ever. The new Magic Keyboard opens to the magical floating design that customers love, and now includes a function row for access to features like screen brightness and volume controls. It also has a gorgeous aluminum palm rest and larger trackpad that’s even more responsive with haptic feedback, so the entire experience feels just like using a MacBook. The new Magic Keyboard attaches magnetically, and the Smart Connector immediately connects power and data without the need for Bluetooth. The machined aluminum hinge also includes a USB-C connector for charging. The new Magic Keyboard comes in two colors that perfectly complement the new iPad Pro: black with a space black aluminum palm rest, and white with a silver aluminum palm rest.

The new Smart Folio for iPad Pro attaches magnetically and now supports multiple viewing angles for greater flexibility. Available in black, white, and denim, it complements the colors of the new iPad Pro.

iPadOS is packed with features that push the boundaries of what’s possible on iPad. With Reference Mode, iPadOS can precisely match color requirements of the Ultra Retina XDR display for tasks in which accurate colors and consistent image quality are critical — including review and approve, color grading, and compositing. Stage Manager enables users to work with multiple overlapping windows in a single view, resize windows, tap to switch between apps, and more. With full external display support of up to 6K, iPad Pro users can also extend their workflow, as well as use the built-in camera on an external display for enhanced video conferencing. Users can take advantage of the powerful AI capabilities in iPad Pro and intelligent features in iPadOS, including Visual Look Up, Subject Lift, Live Text, or Live Captions and Personal Voice for accessibility.

With iPadOS 17 , users can customize the Lock Screen to make it more personal — taking advantage of the larger display on iPad — and interactive widgets take glanceable information further with the ability to get tasks done right in the moment with just a tap. The Notes app gives users new ways to organize, read, annotate, and collaborate on PDFs, and working with PDFs is also easier with AutoFill, which intelligently identifies and fills fields in forms.

Logic Pro for iPad 2 , available starting Monday, May 13, introduces incredible studio assistant features that augment the music-making process and provide artists help right when they need it — all while ensuring they maintain full creative control. These features include Session Players, which expand on popular Drummer capabilities in Logic to include a new Bass Player and Keyboard Player; ChromaGlow, to instantly add warmth to tracks; and Stem Splitter, to extract and work with individual parts of a single audio recording.

Final Cut Pro for iPad 2 , available later this spring, introduces Live Multicam, a new feature that transforms iPad into a mobile production studio, allowing users to view and control up to four connected iPhone and iPad devices wirelessly. 5 To support Live Multicam, an all-new capture app also comes to iPad and iPhone, Final Cut Camera, 6 giving users control over options like white balance, ISO, and shutter speed, along with monitoring tools like overexposure indicators and focus peaking. Final Cut Camera works as a standalone capture app or with Live Multicam. Final Cut Pro for iPad 2 also allows users to create or open projects from external storage, giving editors even more flexibility, and offers new content options. 7

The new iPad Pro is designed with the environment in mind, including 100 percent recycled aluminum in the enclosure, 100 percent recycled rare earth elements in all magnets, and 100 percent recycled gold plating and tin soldering in multiple printed circuit boards. The new iPad Pro meets Apple’s high standards for energy efficiency, and is free of mercury, brominated flame retardants, and PVC. The packaging is 100 percent fiber-based, bringing Apple closer to its goal to remove plastic from all packaging by 2025.

Today, Apple is carbon neutral for global corporate operations, and by 2030, plans to be carbon neutral across the entire manufacturing supply chain and life cycle of every product.

Pricing and Availability

  • Nano-texture glass is an option on the 1TB and 2TB configurations of the 11-inch and 13-inch iPad Pro models.
  • iPad Pro models with 256GB or 512GB storage feature the Apple M4 chip with a 9‑core CPU. iPad Pro models with 1TB or 2TB storage feature the Apple M4 chip with a 10‑core CPU.
  • Testing was conducted by Apple in March and April 2024. See apple.com/ipad-pro for more information.
  • Testing was conducted by Apple in March and April 2024 using preproduction 13-inch iPad Pro (M4) units with a 10-core CPU and 16GB of RAM. Performance was measured using select industry‑standard benchmarks. PC laptop chip performance data is from testing ASUS Zenbook 14 OLED (UX3405MA) with Core Ultra 7 155H and 32GB of RAM. Performance tests are conducted using specific computer systems and reflect the approximate performance of iPad Pro.
  • Final Cut Pro for iPad 2 is compatible with iPad models with the M1 chip or later, and Logic Pro for iPad 2 will be available on iPad models with the A12 Bionic chip or later.
  • Final Cut Camera is compatible with iPhone X S and later with iOS 17.4 or later, and iPad models compatible with iPadOS 17.4 or later.
  • External project support requires iPadOS 17.5 or later.

Press Contacts

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Overkill —

M4 ipad pro review: well, now you’re just showing off, this tablet offers much more than you’ll actually need..

Samuel Axon - May 13, 2024 9:01 pm UTC

The back of an iPad with its Apple logo centered

The new iPad Pro is a technical marvel, with one of the best screens I’ve ever seen, performance that few other machines can touch, and a new, thinner design that no one expected.

It’s a prime example of Apple flexing its engineering and design muscles for all to see. Since it marks the company’s first foray into OLED beyond the iPhone or Watch, and the first time a new M-series chip has debuted on something other than a Mac, it comes across as a tech demo for where the company is headed beyond just tablets.

Still, it remains unclear why most people would spend one, two, or even three thousand dollars on a tablet that, despite its amazing hardware, does less than a comparably priced laptop—or at least does it a little more awkwardly, even if it's impressively quick and has a gorgeous screen.

Specifications

There are some notable design changes in the 2024 iPad Pro, but really, it’s all about the specs—and it’s a more notable specs jump than usual in a couple of areas.

First up, there’s the M4 chip. The previous iPad Pro had an M2 chip, and the latest Mac chip is the M3, so not only did the iPad Pro jump two whole generations, but this is the first time it has debuted the newest iteration of Apple Silicon. (Previously, new M-series chips launched on the Mac first and came to the iPad Pro a few months later.)

Using second-generation 3 nm tech, the M4’s top configuration has a 10-core CPU, a 10-core GPU, and a 16-core NPU. In that configuration, the 10-core CPU has four performance cores and six efficiency cores.

A lower configuration of the M4 has just nine CPU cores—three performance and six efficiency. Which one you get is tied to how much storage you buy. 256GB and 512GB models get nine CPU cores, while 1TB and 2TB get 10. Additionally, the two smaller storage sizes have 8GB of RAM to the larger ones’ 16GB.

This isn’t the first time Apple has tied RAM to storage configurations, but doing that with CPU cores is new for the iPad. Fortunately, the company is upfront about all this in its specs sheet, whereas the RAM differentiation wasn’t always clear to buyers in the past. (Both configurations claim 120GB/s memory bandwidth, though.)

Can the M4 help the iPad Pro bridge the gap between laptop and tablet? Mostly, it made me excited to see the M4 in a laptop.

Regardless of the specific configuration, the M4 promises substantially better CPU and GPU performance than the M2, and it supports hardware-accelerated ray-tracing via Metal, which some games and applications can take advantage of if developers put in the work to make it happen. (It looked great in a demo of Diablo Immortal I saw, but it’s unclear how often we’ll actually see it in the wild.)

Apple claims 1.5x faster CPU performance than the M2 and up to 4x faster graphics performance specifically on applications that involve new features like ray-tracing or hardware-accelerated mesh shading. It hasn't made any specific GPU performance claims beyond those narrow cases.

Further Reading

Some neat machine-learning features are already possible on the M4—you can generate audio tracks using certain instruments in your Logic Pro projects, apply tons of image optimizations to photos with just a click or two, and so on.

reader comments

Channel ars technica.

create presentation ipad

9 cool tricks to make the most of your iPad

The latest ipad pros and ipad airs have a surprising number of neat things that make using them a little easier, and dare i say it, more fun.

A 2024 iPad Air and iPad Pro sitting side by side showing the lock screen and apps next to an old Macintosh

The latest iPad Airs and iPad Pros breathed fresh life into Apple’s tablets just as they seemed to be getting stale. Love them or hate them , the new Pros and Airs are pretty damn powerful, with the M4-powered tablet being practically just as capable as the most recent baseline MacBooks , but with the extra benefit of a beautiful OLED touchscreen. Now’s the time to get even more intimate with all your iPad is capable of.

If you are thinking of buying one of the new iPads , we have a beginner’s guide for you . If you want to know how to get the most out of the new Apple Pencil Pro, we have a separate review for that . But what if you’re truly trying to get the most out of your tablet? There are a few cool features and options that will make your app-based experience a little bit easier or, at the very least, a bit more interesting.

For better or worse, iPadOS is its own unique specimen sitting in the center of Apple’s self-contained software terrarium. It exists somewhere between iPhone and Mac, though in its effort to be a jack of all trades, it loses out on some of the ease of iPhones and the versatility of Macs. You’ll notice the power of the new iPads when you run games or intensive apps but not so much during regular day-to-day usage.

However, that doesn’t mean there aren’t a whole lot of interesting things you can still do with the Apple tablet, much of which has to do with the benefits of the latest version of iPadOS, 17.5. The new chip has more AI processing power under the hood, but there’s not much functionality to use that, at least not yet. We’re very interested in seeing what Apple has in store for WWDC , where we’ll likely catch the first hint of iPadOS 18.

Customize Your Home Screen With Interactable Widgets

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First off, yes, this is a rather obvious thing for anybody used to their mobile phone, but the iPad has been rather restrictive about its home screen and which widgets you can put on it. Since iPadOS 17 arrived, you can hold down on the lock screen to customize the background of the lock screen and the home screen. Of course, you can change the wallpaper, but you can also add a selection of widgets to the lock screen, change the font and color of the date and time, and even set whether you prefer the preset dark or light mode with the two buttons on the bottom right.

The preset wallpapers are all pretty nice, though the Astronomy versions are my personal favorite. You can swap between the Earth, the Moon, or any of the other planets in our solar system. If it reminds you of iOS, that’s kinda the point.

It also lets you customize widgets on your Home Screen. These widgets are interactable, meaning if you click on some of them, you can mark reminders or turn on lights without having to open individual apps. You can find all the available widgets by holding down on the home screen and then pressing the plus button on the top right of the screen once it comes up. Yes, I know, it’s all really basic, but to get the most out of your new iPad, it’s important to start with the simple things.

Spotlight Remains the Easiest Way to Find Your Apps or Settings

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If you don’t know about Spotlight on iOS or iPadOS, then this one’s for you. Simply swiping down from the center of the screen brings up a search bar that makes it far easier to find the app you’re looking for without digging around too much. If you type in a website, you can also quickly bring up Safari or your other installed browsers to go to that webpage.

For those who haven’t used an iPad in iPadOS 17.5, there’s actually been several improvements that allow you to accomplish tasks like quickly turning off Bluetooth without having to access the specific Bluetooth settings menu.

But what if you want to access search from anywhere without first going exiting an app? Hey, there’s a simple setting that can help you out.

Create Your Own Gestures, Such as Opening Spotlight Search from Any App

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You can use some of the basic Accessibility options to access actions like Spotlight Search with a few customized gestures. First, go into Settings , then Touch . Click on the Assistive Touch and toggle it on. This creates a small icon on the iPad Screen that looks like a circle inside a square. Next, scroll down to the Custom Actions panel; you can set a custom action for when you long press or double tap. I personally set my Spotlight to open on a double tap on my screen, but you can set it to do something as simple as take a screenshot or bring up Siri. You can also create your own gesture using the Create New Gesture function as well.

Now, if you double press the Assistive Touch button, you can access specific functions like Spotlight or your camera without bringing up the app. This can be very helpful for some folks, though I’m sure some others might not like how much it clutters up the screen.

While there’s no basic calculator on iPad, funnily enough, Spotlight does also have a built-in calculator for solving simple math equations.

There’s a Kind of Virtual Touchpad Available On the iPad Virtual Keyboard

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So you don’t actually need a Magic Keyboard to use a trackpad-like motion to select text on iPadOS.

When you have the virtual keyboard up on the screen, if you use two fingers or tap and hold the spacebar, the keyboard will turn blank, and you can then move your finger back and forth across the screen to shift the cursor to any part of the on-screen text. Is that not useful enough for you? You can also do it even when selecting emojis from the special emoji menu on iPadOS. On the bottom of the emoji bar is the small “space” key. Hold that, and you’ll have the same ability to move the cursor anywhere on the text box.

There are Three Different Modes for Managing Your iPad Menus, But Stage Manager is the Best

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If you weren’t around for iPads back when Apple released its Stage Manager mode on iPadOS 16, you probably had no idea there was more than one mode for multitasking on iPad. If you go into settings and search for Multitasking & Gestures, you see right at the top there are several modes and options for managing your apps. By default, it sits on Split View & Slide Over. This mode allows you to have two apps side by side when you press on the three dots at the top of each app. You can have one additional app available in a floating menu. This works, but Stage Manager is the superior option for most people who are used to a desktop experience. Here, you’ll use those same three dots to add a number of apps together at once, and you can move them around or rescale them to a few preset forms. On the left, you’ll see a row of other open apps or app groups, and pressing them swaps out the current set.

This mode is also best for when you’re connected to an external display, but be warned, it still isn’t anywhere near perfect for multitasking.

The Three-Finger Swipe Undo is Your Friend (Plus Other Helpful Gestures)

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Navigating between apps on an iPad can occasionally be a chore. However, if this is your first time using an Apple-brand tablet, you should familiarize yourself with some of the most common swiping gestures. The first one I want you to remember is the four-finger swipe. This will switch you over to the next currently active app or app group, depending on whether you’re using Stage Manager or Split View.

The next gesture I would suggest learning is the three-finger swipe left. This lets you undo your last action or written text. It’s especially helpful if you’re not using a Magic Keyboard and you’re trying to quickly undo it when you accidentally delete a whole ream of text. If you use three fingers and move it to the right, you’ll redo the action you undid. You might want to learn a few other handy gestures, but if you don’t want any of the productivity or four-finger gestures, you can toggle them off in the Multitasking & Gestures menu mentioned before.

You Can Disable a Part of the Touch Screen on Top of Apps

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For whatever reason, you may need to disable the touch sensitivity on a part of the screen. Well, surprisingly, the iPad’s Guided Access lets you do that.

First, you’ll need to go into the Accessibility menu under settings and toggle on Guided Access. Note that sometimes the iPad won’t allow you to use Guided Access until you restart it. This happened my first time trying it, but it was working fine once I restarted the tablet.

Now, when you triple-click the power button when in an app, you should see a separate Guided Access menu on top of your app. Here, you can go down to Options and select which functions you don’t wish to work. You can set a timer for how long this lasts. If you ever need to disable it, you need to hit the power button three times once more and click End .

Turn Your Touch Keyboard Into a Floating Keyboard With a Simple Pinch

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Here’s one for folks who don’t need the keyboard to take up their iPad screen. Pinch down on the keyboard to shrink it, then expand your fingers to make it big again.

If you hate gesture controls, there’s another way to do it. When you bring up the keyboard, hold down on the button on the bottom right with the small icon and the arrow underneath it. You’ll see a small button that says Floating . Hit that, and your keyboard will now look pretty much exactly like it does on iOS. You can drag it around anywhere on the screen, and when you want it to become big again, drag it to the bottom portion of the iPad.

The iPad Document Scanning Features Automatically Detect Any Kind of Text

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The iPad’s camera is incredibly adept at detecting when there’s text in its field of view, basically making it incredibly easy to digitally record anything from business cards or, in my case, the details of the recent Lego Star Wars TIE Interceptor . The document scanning feature itself is very good at detecting if you’re looking at a piece of paper, allowing you to scan multiple pages in a row and then quickly edit and save them.

What’s more, on the latest iPad Pro, the document scanning feature has gotten even better at recognizing forms or receipts. It also removes shadows with a so-called “adaptive flash” and then stitches together multiple photos to get the best scan. I tried this out on a set of documents under some pretty dim light settings, and it was indeed pretty damn good at picking out the right light level and orientation for the documents.

A version of this article originally appeared on Gizmodo .

Keynote User Guide for iPad

  • What’s new in Keynote 14.0
  • Intro to Keynote
  • Intro to images, charts and other objects
  • Create a presentation
  • Choose how to navigate your presentation
  • Open a presentation
  • Save and name a presentation
  • Find a presentation
  • Print a presentation
  • Prevent accidental editing
  • Undo or redo changes
  • Quick navigation
  • Change the working view
  • Customise the toolbar
  • Copy text and objects between apps
  • Basic touchscreen gestures
  • Use Apple Pencil with Keynote
  • Create a presentation using VoiceOver
  • Add or delete slides
  • Reorder slides
  • Group or ungroup slides
  • Skip or unskip a slide
  • Change the slide size
  • Change a slide background
  • Add a border around a slide
  • Show or hide text placeholders
  • Show or hide slide numbers
  • Apply a slide layout
  • Add and edit slide layouts
  • Change a theme
  • Add an image
  • Add an image gallery
  • Edit an image
  • Add and edit a shape
  • Combine or break apart shapes
  • Save a shape to the shapes library
  • Add and align text inside a shape
  • Add 3D objects
  • Add lines and arrows
  • Add and edit drawings
  • Add video and audio
  • Record video and audio
  • Edit video and audio
  • Add live video
  • Set the movie and image formats
  • Position and align objects
  • Use alignment guides
  • Place objects inside a text box or shape
  • Layer, group and lock objects
  • Change object transparency
  • Fill shapes and text boxes with colour or an image
  • Add a border to an object
  • Add a caption or title
  • Add a reflection or shadow
  • Use object styles
  • Resize, rotate and flip objects
  • Add linked objects to make your presentation interactive
  • Select text
  • Copy and paste text
  • Format a presentation for another language
  • Use phonetic guides
  • Use bidirectional text
  • Use vertical text
  • Change the look of text
  • Use text styles
  • Change text capitalisation
  • Add drop caps
  • Make characters superscript or subscript
  • Format fractions automatically
  • Format dashes and quotation marks
  • Format Chinese, Japanese or Korean text
  • Set tab stops
  • Format text into columns
  • Adjust line spacing
  • Format lists
  • Add mathematical equations
  • Add borders and rules (lines) to separate text
  • Add or delete a table
  • Select tables, cells, rows and columns
  • Add or remove rows and columns
  • Move rows and columns
  • Resize rows and columns
  • Merge or unmerge cells
  • Change the look of table text
  • Show, hide or edit a table title
  • Change table gridlines and colours
  • Use table styles
  • Resize, move or lock a table
  • Add and edit cell content
  • Format dates, currency and more
  • Highlight cells conditionally
  • Format tables for bidirectional text
  • Alphabetise or sort table data
  • Add or delete a chart
  • Change a chart from one type to another
  • Modify chart data
  • Move, resize and rotate a chart
  • Change the look of data series
  • Add a legend, gridlines and other markings
  • Change the look of chart text and labels
  • Add a chart border and background
  • Use chart styles
  • Animate objects onto and off a slide
  • Animate objects on a slide
  • Change build order and timing
  • Add transitions
  • Present on your iPad
  • Present on a separate display
  • Present on iPad over the internet
  • Use a remote
  • Make a presentation advance automatically
  • Play a slideshow with multiple presenters
  • Add and view presenter notes
  • Rehearse on your device
  • Play a recorded presentation
  • Check spelling
  • Look up words
  • Find and replace text
  • Replace text automatically
  • Set your author name for comments
  • Highlight text
  • Add and print comments
  • Send a presentation
  • Intro to collaboration
  • Invite others to collaborate
  • Collaborate on a shared presentation
  • See the latest activity in a shared presentation
  • Change a shared presentation’s settings
  • Stop sharing a presentation
  • Shared folders and collaboration
  • Use Box to collaborate
  • Create an animated GIF
  • Post your presentation in a blog
  • Use iCloud Drive with Keynote
  • Export to PowerPoint or another file format
  • Restore an earlier version of a presentation
  • Move a presentation
  • Delete a presentation
  • Password-protect a presentation
  • Create and manage custom themes
  • Transfer files with AirDrop
  • Transfer presentations with Handoff
  • Transfer presentations with the Finder
  • Keyboard shortcuts
  • Keyboard shortcut symbols

create presentation ipad

Make a presentation advance automatically in Keynote on iPad

You can set your presentation to advance automatically, like a film, with no interaction needed. You can also set it to play immediately when it’s opened, or to play continuously in a loop.

the Actions Menu button

Tap Self-Playing, then adjust the sliders to change the timing of transitions or build effects.

Set any of the playback options:

Loop Slideshow: Turn on to have the presentation return to the first slide at the end of the slideshow.

Restart Show if Idle: Turn on, then drag the slider to set the amount of idle time with no viewer interaction before the presentation returns to the first slide.

the Play button

Accessories

Everything you need to create the ultimate ipad pro desk setup.

Avatar for Ryan Christoffel

The M4 iPad Pro is capable of being used by many as their primary computer. Maybe you just want the best iPad for PDFs, spreadsheets, note-taking, and other simple tasks. Or perhaps you’re a creative professional who truly pushes the performance of the iPad with video editing work, AI-driven photo edits, and more.

If you rely on the iPad to get things done, you may be interested in building an iPad-centric desk setup for your primary workspace. Sure, the iPad’s portability and versatility make it a great computer for lounging outdoors or taking to a coffee shop. But if you can build a true workstation at home or in the office, you’ll need some key accessories to go with it.

Here are some of the best accessories to create the ultimate iPad Pro desk setup.

Best accessories for your iPad-centric desk setup

create presentation ipad

  • Twelve South Compass Pro Stand : This stand is ultra portable and thus can be easily folded up and thrown in a bag for using it on the go. When in use, the Compass Pro can set your iPad into a drafting orientation or prop it fully upright.
  • BENKS Magnetic iPad Stand ( 11-inch / 13-inch ): Raise your iPad Pro to eye level while gaining the flexibility to rotate it to your preferred orientation and angle. Easily attach and detach from the magnetic base when you’re ready to work elsewhere. This versatile stand is on display in the featured image up top.

Keyboard and Trackpad

  • Apple Magic Trackpad : If you’re going to use your iPad at a desk, you almost certainly want a trackpad to go with it. You could buy Apple’s all-in-one keyboard/trackpad solution , but for desk use, you’re likely better off with a standalone trackpad.
  • Apple Magic Keyboard : Not the iPad-exclusive keyboard/case combo , this is the Mac Bluetooth keyboard that also happens to work exceedingly well as an iPad desk accessory.

Anker USB-C hub for iPad Pro

  • Anker 341 USB-C Hub : This hub covers a robust array of connection needs at a compelling price point. It supports SD, microSD, and HDMI plus provides multiple USB-C and USB-A ports.

Apple Pencil Stand

Apple Pencil silicone stand next to an iPad

  • Uppercase NimbleStand for Apple Pencil : This silicone vertical stand for the Apple Pencil will give your desk the classic look of having a quill at the ready.

MagSafe Charger

Twelve South HiRise 3 MagSafe charger

  • Twelve South HiRise 3 Deluxe MagSafe Charger : This isn’t specific to the iPad, but your desk setup won’t be complete without a solid iPhone charger. This one features a clean look and supports iOS 17’s StandBy mode, while also being able to charge AirPods and an Apple Watch at the same time.

Apple Studio Display connected to an iPad Pro

  • Apple Studio Display : iPadOS at last offers full external display support, and the best way to experience that is with Apple’s Studio Display, which will effectively double the number of apps you can run at once.

Within Apple’s product lineup, the iPad is the most versatile device available. You can use it with multitouch only, or grab a Pencil, keyboard, or trackpad. This versatility means there is no shortage of accessory options out there. If you’re aiming to build out your iPad setup, there are abundant possibilities to choose from. The recommendations above are just a start.

Are you planning to build an iPad-centric desk setup? What are your desk essentials? Let us know in the comments.

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

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Check out 9to5Mac on YouTube for more Apple news:

iPad Pro

The new iPad Pro is powered by the A12Z processo…

Accessories

Ryan got his start in journalism as an Editor at MacStories, where he worked for four years covering Apple news, writing app reviews, and more. For two years he co-hosted the Adapt podcast on Relay FM, which focused entirely on the iPad. As a result, it should come as no surprise that his favorite Apple device is the iPad Pro.

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IMAGES

  1. A Beginner’s Guide to PowerPoint on the iPad

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  2. Create your first presentation in Keynote on iPad

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  3. A Beginner’s Guide to PowerPoint on the iPad

    create presentation ipad

  4. MAKING A PRESENTATION ON MY IPAD 🥰💗

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  5. PowerPoint on iPad: create presentations anytime, anywhere.

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  6. iPad Pro Presentation Mock-Up on Yellow Images Creative Store

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VIDEO

  1. Presentation: iPad Mini, iPad4, MacBook Pro 13" Retina, iMac 27"

  2. ASSIGNMENT PRESENTATION IPAD

  3. Презентация (обзор) iPad Mini (айпад мини) русская озвучка

  4. Presentation iPad -VIPad.fr

  5. Tag : Questions taboues

  6. MyPad Catalog

COMMENTS

  1. Create a presentation in Keynote on iPad

    To play the presentation, tap , then tap a slide to go to the next slide. To end the presentation, pinch closed anywhere on the screen. For more ways to show a presentation, see Play a presentation on your iPhone or iPad. To close the presentation, tap in the top-left corner of the screen. Closing the presentation doesn't quit Keynote.

  2. A Beginner's Guide to PowerPoint on the iPad

    Pricing. PowerPoint for iOS is free from the App Store and allows you to view PowerPoint files from anywhere. If you want to edit or create presentations from the iPad though, you're going to need to subscribe to Office 365, which runs $6.99/month or $70/year for individuals on up to 5 devices. An Office 365 subscription comes with the full ...

  3. 9 best apps for building presentations in iOS

    Apple's Keynote app ( download on iOS) helps you create beautiful slideshow presentations. Start by choosing one of 30 Apple-designed themes and then replace the dummy text and graphics with your ...

  4. Can You Create a PowerPoint on an iPad? Here's How!

    January 12, 2024 by Matthew Burleigh. Creating a PowerPoint on an iPad is simple! All you need is to download the PowerPoint app from the App Store, sign in with your Microsoft account, and you can start creating your presentation right away. It's an efficient way to work on your slides whether you're on the go or don't have access to a ...

  5. Can I do a PowerPoint presentation using an iPad?

    In this case, all you need to do is simply open your email account on your iPad, click on the email that contains the PowerPoint file, and download it. 2. Transfer the PPT file to your iPad using a cloud storage service. Another quick and easy option is using a cloud storage services. There are plenty of cloud storage services such as Google ...

  6. How to Play a PowerPoint Presentation on an iPad: A Step-by-Step Guide

    Step 4: Play your presentation. To start your presentation, tap the "Play" icon. Your iPad will switch to presentation mode, displaying your slides full-screen. Swipe left or right to navigate through the slides.

  7. 8 Things I've Learned Using an iPad for Presentations

    Before the presentation, turn on both "Do Not Disturb" and "Airplane Mode". In presentation mode, Keynote swears that it blocks pop-ups, reminders, incoming calls, and other distractions. To its credit, I've never seen it do otherwise. That said, I always enable Do Not Disturb on my iPad. I put the device in airplane mode.

  8. Best presentation apps for iPad and iPhone in 2024

    6. Keynote. Here's the app that Apple itself uses to present brilliant creations to the world. It's the most powerful app to present your ideas on an iPhone or iPad. In addition to all the basic features, there are advanced options like animated charts and cinematic transitions to add that extra flair with ease.

  9. How to Make Presentations Using Only an iPad

    Would you like to create a slide-based presentation straight from your iPad?In this 3-Minute Classroom Problem Solver you'll learn how to make a presentation...

  10. Can You Make a Powerpoint on iPad? Here's How To Do It

    How to Create a Presentation on iPad. Creating a presentation on an iPad is an easy and convenient way to share information with others. With the help of Microsoft PowerPoint for iPad apps, you can create a presentation, add text, images, charts, and more to create a professional-looking presentation.

  11. PowerPoint on iPad: create presentations anytime, anywhere

    Select the iPad in the top navigation and then go to Apps in the drop-down menu. Scroll down to the bottom, where you will find a list of apps that you can add files to. Select PowerPoint on the left. You can add files through the iTunes buttons, or drag and drop a file into the space from your computer.

  12. How to Create Presentations for an iPad

    Presentation Size. When designing your presentation, set the size to 1024×768, the same as the iPad, to avoid any viewer compatibility issues. Your presentation tool of choice. Creating presentations for the iPad is easy if you're a Mac user and use Keynote to create your slideshows and presentations. However, if your desktop computer uses ...

  13. 10 Must-Have iPad Apps for Interactive Business Presentations

    In 2018, 79% of mobile business use came from iPhone's and iPad's, with 41% of that coming from iPad usage. Check out these five apps to help make and present interactive business presentations. iPads and smartphones offer efficient solutions to everyday projects in the business world.

  14. 10 Best Presentation Apps for iPad

    1. Keynote: Keynote is one of the popular presentation apps for iPad. When it comes to giving presentations, there is no tool more versatile or user-friendly than Keynote for iPad. This powerful app allows users to create beautiful slideshows complete with animations, transitions, and multimedia elements.

  15. How to Create a Slideshow on iPad: 7 Steps (with Pictures)

    Open Photos. It's the app that has an image of a color wheel that resembles a flower. 2. Tap the Albums tab. It's in the bottom-right corner. It has an image of a folder. Click here to read how to create an album in Photos. 3. Tap Slideshow.

  16. Can You Create a PowerPoint on an iPad?

    Apple's iPad is capable a wide range of tasks, including building presentations for Microsoft's PowerPoint presentation software. To create a compelling PowerPoint presentation, you'll need an ...

  17. Prezi mobile apps for iPhone, iPad, and Android

    Take mobile presenting to the Next level. Try Prezi Next free. Take your presentations anywhere with mobile Prezi apps for iOS iPhone, iPad, Android phones, tablets, and desktop. Mobility sets great ideas in motion.

  18. 15 Best Presentation Software for 2024 (Full Comparison Guide)

    This presentation software is for professionals and educators that need to be able to create presentations offline. Also for those who can take advantage of the Kiosk Mode. ... Available to Create on Multiple Devices. There are iPad and device apps available for editing on those devices as well. Collaboration Possibilities. Paid premium plans ...

  19. Create a new presentation with Copilot in PowerPoint

    Edit the presentation to suit your needs, ask Copilot to add a slide, or start over with a new presentation and refine your prompt to include more specifics.For example, "Create a presentation about hybrid meeting best practices that includes examples for team building." Create a presentation with a template

  20. 6 Ways to Create More Interactive PowerPoint Presentations

    Engage your audience with cool, actionable features. 2. Embed Microsoft Forms (Education or Business Only) If you plan to send your PPT presentation to others—for example, if you're a trainer sending step-by-step instruction presentation, a teacher sending an independent learning task to your students, or a campaigner for your local councilor sending a persuasive PPT to constituents—you ...

  21. Just buy a new iPad Pro? Here are 10 accessories to upgrade ...

    It's a great time to be an iPad Pro user. The newest iPad Pro model comes equipped with Apple's most advanced chip ever, the M4, plus its best display in the Ultra Retina XDR, not to mention a ...

  22. Apple unveils stunning new iPad Pro with M4 chip and Apple Pencil Pro

    CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA Apple today unveiled the groundbreaking new iPad Pro in a stunningly thin and light design, taking portability and performance to the next level. Available in silver and space black finishes, the new iPad Pro comes in two sizes: an expansive 13-inch model and a super-portable 11-inch model. Both sizes feature the world's most advanced display — a new breakthrough ...

  23. M4 iPad Pro review: Well, now you're just showing off

    (Previously, new M-series chips launched on the Mac first and came to the iPad Pro a few months later.) Using second-generation 3 nm tech, the M4's top configuration has a 10-core CPU, a 10-core ...

  24. iPad Pro and iPad Air: 9 cool tricks to make the most of it

    The latest iPad Pros and iPad Airs have a surprising number of neat things that make using them a little easier, and dare I say it, more fun. Spirit Airlines drops change and cancellation fees.

  25. Make a presentation advance automatically in Keynote on iPad

    To play the presentation, tap in the toolbar. To change the presentation back to one that's manually advanced by tapping or swiping the screen, tap , tap Presentation Options, tap Presentation Type, then choose Normal. In Keynote on iPad, set your presentation to advance automatically, play immediately when it is opened or play continuously ...

  26. Everything you need to create the ultimate iPad Pro desk setup

    Here are some of the best accessories to create the ultimate iPad Pro desk setup. Best accessories for your iPad-centric desk setup iPad Stand. Twelve South Compass Pro Stand: This stand is ultra ...