Or for a cheaper alternative, $79 for a single-user FlashPaper2
license gets you the same manual-conversion capability.  I've used it
on several occasions to convert PowerPoint and PDF documents to SWF
and it does a great job.  The conversion is handled by a printer
driver through the File->Print dialog of the native application for
the document you want to convert, so basically any printable document
can be converted to SWF.

--- In [email protected], "dougmccune" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Someone mentioned Breeze already, but I figured I'd throw in that you
> can buy a single license of Breeze Presenter for about $1,000 (without
> buying the server or other more expensive parts), which lets you do
> the PowerPoint to SWF conversion. But you would still have to manually
> convert each PPT you wanted and then figure out how to pull that into
> Flex. 
> 
> --- In [email protected], Larry Larson <lrlarson@> wrote:
> >
> > There is a useful (if expensive) application called Articulate that  
> > takes a PPT and turns into a swf that you could then, of course, use  
> > in Flex somehow.
> > 
> > Larry Larson
> > LarsonAssociates
> > NYC
> >
>







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