Yes Keynote 2 presentations are compatible as you can export them to a .ppt file (Pages files can also be export as .doc). I prefer keynote 2 to powerpoint. I switch back and forth between word and pages, depending on what I want to do, but if I had to choose one, I'd reluctantly choose word. Plus with office you get excel, which I use a lot, so I'd go with office, but it all depends on what you want. I'm very happy that I have bothiAFC said:Hello folks,
Which one is better to use? Are Keynote 2 presentations compatible with my school PC's equipped with PowerPoint 2000? What's better in iWork than in Office? (I already know Keynote 2 has better effects).
Thank you!
ejb190 said:And the little transfering between Keynote and Ppt I have done has been a total pain in the... But I am still using Keynote 1.1.
IJ Reilly said:Like any other software purchase, what you buy should depend entirely on what you need. If you need a spreadsheet, at this point Office is really your only choice (though this is expected to change). If you need an easy-to-use word processor with modest page layout capabilities, Pages is the clear choice. If you want a word processor that includes every feature known to man plus a few that aren't, buy Office. As for presentations, I've yet to hear anyone tout PowerPoint as the winner in a shoot-out over Keynote. I just know what my audiences tell me about Keynote -- which is "oooh-ahhh." Literally.
rjphoto said:That was my question. I haven't used ver.2 yet. Transferring from PPT to Keynote in Ver. 1 was a pain. The text would come over but if there were several bullet points you would end up adjusting the text box and font size to make everything fit. I hope that has been fixed. (Anyone know for sure?)
As for the tricks that Keynote can do, they are awsome. I set up for a presentation and the speaker comes in with a 12"PB. He was a Flight Surgeon in the military and currently is an Emergency Room doctor. His presentation in Keynote knock my socks off.
After it was over one of the know-it-all Windows users ask how he did all of those cool transitions? He'd didn't know PowerPoint could do that. (He couldn't see the PB on the podium.) The speaker looks at me (we had talked before hand and he knew I was a Mac guy, too) and back at the other doc and says, "It's a Mac thing." and left it at that...