You can create some 3D effects in the older Microsoft Office applications, but it isn't as flexible in options and it's a little less user-friendly. Also, you can't morph shapes or easily create freeform 3D objects on MS Office 97 or 2003.
That's pretty neat! If Microsoft didn't make their software such a pain in the ass to use with their installation limits and verification requirements I might actually consider buying it.
I know how you feel. Fortunately, I didn't have any trouble with MS Office 2007. You do need Windows XP (sp2) or Vista to run MS Office '07. It ran smoothly for me & I use XP, but it's a little slow.
I know there are free open-source alternatives to MS Office, but I don't know if they can draw in 3D or stuff like that. :P
Microsoft is more focused on aesthetics, rather than functionality. -_-
There are custom animations that allow you to rotate (under Emphasis > spin effect). If you have multiple 3D objects doing one action, you have to group the object in advance. You can control the direction of the spin as well as the angle and time that the rotation will have.
Many people also have little animations based off of hundreds of slides. You would have different slides as seperate frames (similar to film or a flipbook).
As I stated, you can manually rotate the image and have frames per slide (similar to a flipbook). If you're inputing a 3D object in a formal PowerPoint Presentation, that may not be practical, since it consumes about 10 slides to do one simple task.
I'm not aware of an animation that rotates in that direction. Remember that the object will spin according to how the image was created before adding the 3D effects. You can build the object from the side and try the spin effect.
good one!
robert37026 6 months ago
Is it me or am I the only one who would make kinky love to this music? 0.o
DarkBallYE 11 months ago
why do my 3d effects lag so much it kills my presentation anyway i can compress than ANSWER PLEASE!!!!!
mcSNAKe187 1 year ago
how can you make a cube rotate ?
can you please show how it is done ? thank you!
iccaguioa 1 year ago
i still like 2003 better
shapeworkstudios1 1 year ago
how to make them move and fly?
Xheelal 1 year ago
great gadget!
rjohn18 2 years ago
Hey kek, where can I download the version of this that you have?
bobleheadNS 3 years ago
Even though I have this version and think it's pretty neat but my friend wants to know if it can be done on older versions
nextgen111 3 years ago
You can create some 3D effects in the older Microsoft Office applications, but it isn't as flexible in options and it's a little less user-friendly. Also, you can't morph shapes or easily create freeform 3D objects on MS Office 97 or 2003.
KEKInc 3 years ago
thanks
nextgen111 3 years ago
That's pretty neat! If Microsoft didn't make their software such a pain in the ass to use with their installation limits and verification requirements I might actually consider buying it.
KeroroGunsouTX 4 years ago
I know how you feel. Fortunately, I didn't have any trouble with MS Office 2007. You do need Windows XP (sp2) or Vista to run MS Office '07. It ran smoothly for me & I use XP, but it's a little slow.
I know there are free open-source alternatives to MS Office, but I don't know if they can draw in 3D or stuff like that. :P
Microsoft is more focused on aesthetics, rather than functionality. -_-
KEKInc 4 years ago
wow! oks! thanks for the info.. pls.. keep on making tutorials like this.. thanks!
wheay21 4 years ago
can you make a 3d in powerpoint that makes it rotate in presentation view? thanks!
wheay21 4 years ago
There are custom animations that allow you to rotate (under Emphasis > spin effect). If you have multiple 3D objects doing one action, you have to group the object in advance. You can control the direction of the spin as well as the angle and time that the rotation will have.
Many people also have little animations based off of hundreds of slides. You would have different slides as seperate frames (similar to film or a flipbook).
KEKInc 4 years ago
yup! thats nice.. but i want to make the object spin like front to back not the round spin.. thanks for the reply...
wheay21 4 years ago
As I stated, you can manually rotate the image and have frames per slide (similar to a flipbook). If you're inputing a 3D object in a formal PowerPoint Presentation, that may not be practical, since it consumes about 10 slides to do one simple task.
I'm not aware of an animation that rotates in that direction. Remember that the object will spin according to how the image was created before adding the 3D effects. You can build the object from the side and try the spin effect.
KEKInc 4 years ago