Following the steps we shared should let you explore the latest Zoom feature of PowerPoint. To see the effects of the zoom feature on your presentation, click the Slide Show icon at the bottom-right corner of PowerPoint.

Summary Zoom creates a section that summarizes your slides. Meanwhile, slide Zoom links to a particular slide in your presentation. Finally, section Zoom creates links for each section within your summary Zoom.


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A summary zoom is like a landing page where you can see the pieces of your presentation all at once. When you're presenting, you can use the zoom to go from one place in your presentation to another in any order you like. You can get creative, skip ahead, or revisit pieces of your slide show without interrupting the flow of your presentation.

Select slides you want to include in your summary zoom. These become the first slides of your summary zoom sections. To learn more about using sections in PowerPoint, see Organize your PowerPoint slides into sections.

Once you've selected all the slides you want to use for your summary zoom, select Insert. Your summary zoom is created, and it appears as a new slide just before the first slide you included in your summary zoom.

A slide zoom can help you make your presentation more dynamic, allowing you to navigate freely between slides in any order you choose without interrupting the flow of your presentation. They're a good option for shorter presentations without lots of sections, but you can use slide zooms for lots of different presentation scenarios.

A section zoom is a link to a section already in your presentation. You can use them to go back to sections you want to really emphasize, or to highlight how certain pieces of your presentation connect. To learn more about using sections in PowerPoint, see Organize your PowerPoint slides into sections.

If you want to return to the zoom slide after viewing sections or slides in your summary, slide, or section zoom, make sure the Return to Zoom check box is selected. If you want to move on to the next slide after viewing part of your zoom, uncheck it.

(If you're working with a summary zoom or a section zoom, you'll return to the zoom slide by default when you're presenting after going to the section. If you're using a slide zoom, you'll move on to the next slide by default after viewing your slide zoom.)

Another way you can change the look of your zoom is by choosing to adopt the background of the slide where your zoom lives to make the zoom almost indistinguishable from the main canvas while you present. Select Zoom Background to make your summary, section, or slide zooms blend in to their home slide.

By default, your zooms will use the zoom transition when you present, which is what helps make the zooms feel so lively. However, if you don't want to use the zoom transition, or if you want to change the duration of the transition, you can do so.

If we wish to zoom in on the three existing slides, we need to insert a blank slide before the three standard slides. Right-click above the top-most slide thumbnail and select New Slide.

Upon each click of the mouse (or hit of the spacebar key) we are gracefully lifted off the current slide, moved to the next thumbnail image, and gently descend into the new slide. Once we reach the last slide, our presentation ends in The Black.

I am making a presentation of a world map. The idea is that on the first slide you see the whole world map and by clicking on each continent you transition to different slides through slide zoom. In each continent there are projects (lines with names). When you click on the project an info box rolls down through an animation. This works great on each single slide, since the info boxes are hidden before you roll them out. But they all show on the world map and cover the projects. Is there any way to have the animations "activated" and those info boxes "hidden" even when viewing this overarching slide? Or perhaps a workaround I hadn't thought of ?

I have a slide which contains with some content that is always shown, a slide zoom and two text boxes that appear through animations. In the presentation, I first want to zoom to the detail slide, go back to the main slide, and then show the text boxes.

To trigger the slide zoom, I need to click onto the miniature slide. However, I usually forget this and hit SPACE instead - hence I show the text box too early. So my question is if it is also possible to add the zoom to the animation order, so that it is also triggered by the space key.

In crime movies they always seems to bring up the virtual map of a city which then zooms in on a particular sector of interest after first blinking a square around the area (if that makes sense?). I have a page form a research article I would like to place on one of the slides, then when I am ready to move on have it zoom in on a picture on the article page as a transition. How can I accomplish something like this in Keynote?

Originally launched in 2016, the Zoom feature in PowerPoint allows you to present your slides in any order you want. PowerPoint presentations have traditionally followed a strict linear format. They start at the start, end at the end and should you have cause to jump back to an earlier slide, well, your audience is just gonna have to wait while you cycle through them.

Not anymore. With just a couple of click, PowerPoint will create a menu slide and all the hyperlinks for you, giving you the freedom to move around your slides in whatever order you, or your audience, want.

For Section Zoom to work, you will need to section off your slides first. You can do this by clicking the first slide in the section in the slide thumbnail view of your PowerPoint window. Then, under the Home tab, click Section and Add Section.

Slide Zoom gives you the option to navigate to any slide you like, from any slide. Instead of creating a separate main menu slide to house your navigation buttons, Slide Zoom adds the button to your chosen slide.

I was about to get a 100-400 IS until I found it to have a slide zoom. My current tele is a twist zoom. I am very used to and confident with this method. I am wondering if the center-of-gravity would change too much for my camera-holding hand to adjust fast enough. I am shooting action, so I don't use a monopod.

I have the 100/400 and I don't find any problem with the push-pull zooming. Actually the zoom range is quite long and it would take a lot of twisting to go from 100mm to 400mm. I also was used to twist zooms and it didn't take very long to get used to it and quite frankly I think I would prefer all push-pull zooms.

I was about to get a 100-400 IS until I found it to have a slide

zoom. My current tele is a twist zoom. I am very used to and

confident with this method. I am wondering if the

center-of-gravity would change too much for my camera-holding hand

to adjust fast enough. I am shooting action, so I don't use a

monopod.

I have a feeling that the design complexity, zoom range and other considerations drive the design process that determines which type of zoom the manufacturer comes up with, push-pull or rotating zoom ring. Nikon's 80-200mm f/2.8 went through several iterations before it ended up as a rotating zoom rather than a push-pull. One of the main factors driving the change was the fact that the push-pull designs could not accomodate a tripod collar.

Before AF cameras, many felt that the push-pull designs were faster because one could zoom and focus almost simultaneously. However, they suffered from zoom creep. Now that AF is the standard, the rotating ring zooms have pretty much become the standard, except for zooms with extreme range, such as the Canon 100-400IS. Fortunately, it has a tension adjustment to prevent zoom creep.

You may have a preference for one type or another. If the concept of a single zoom/focus ring does not appeal to you then you should stick with the rotating zoom type. Having owned both types, I strongly favor the rotating type.

Third of all, for some types of shooting, I have found the slide more useful than a twist-type zoom. For example, in trying to track birds on the wing, I find it is hard to even find them in the viewfinder with the D60 and the 400mm setting. What I do is zoom quickly to the 100mm setting until I find the bird, focus and zoom to the 400mm setting. Since the focus is on servo, it is easy to maintain the focus.

I had the 100-400 and sold it, partially because I was able to get a 300/2.8 to cover the long end (with a 1.4x converter) and partially because I just didn't like the push-pull zoom. Yes, the center of gravity changes dramatically. At the 100 end, you can almost support the weight with the camera hand, while at the 400 end, a lot more weight shifts to the lens hand, increasing the tension on the zoom. Zooming 100-400 was much easier for me than zooming 400-100 (the latter being more commonly needed - how often do you photograph a subject moving away from you?). The difficulty, I suppose, is due to the fact that you have to get your hand out of the way when shortening the lens. Also, the fact that the tripod collar is removable makes it much less stable if you reduce the tension to the point where you can rotate it.

I have a feeling that the design complexity, zoom range and other

considerations drive the design process that determines which type

of zoom the manufacturer comes up with, push-pull or rotating zoom

ring. Nikon's 80-200mm f/2.8 went through several iterations

before it ended up as a rotating zoom rather than a push-pull. One

of the main factors driving the change was the fact that the

push-pull designs could not accomodate a tripod collar. e24fc04721

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