Assuming you are using a reasonably recent version of Microsoft Office, there 
is another easy way of extracting the graphical elements from the original 
document. Save the Office document using one of the new formats such as .DOCX 
(for Word), .XLSX (for Excel), or .PPTX (for PowerPoint). Those "new" files are 
actually Zip file archives, despite their file suffix. Open the file in your 
favorite ZIP utility after renaming the suffix to .ZIP. Inside the .ZIP file, 
you will find a subdirectory named media. Inside that media subdirectory, you 
will find all those wonderful graphics assets as actual files, typically .JPG, 
.TIF, .EPS, .WMF, .EMF, etc. Simply extract the file(s) from the ZIP archive 
and you have what you need!

Good luck.

                - Dov

From: framers-bounces at lists.frameusers.com 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Pat Christenson
Sent: Tuesday, June 14, 2011 10:01 AM
To: Framers Users
Subject: Re: PowerPoint to Frame

I never knew about this! Thanks for posting it.

Pat Christenson

On Jun 13, 2011, at 10:42 PM, Rene Stephenson wrote:


However, I'd like to add a bit about the graphics... Due to the way that 
Microsoft Office products handle graphics, it is best to attempt to get the 
graphics back to their original resolution before doing the save-as-html. To do 
this, you can use the Find feature in PPT (or Word when you have a DOC file), 
searching for any graphic. When Find locates a graphic, from the picture tool 
bar, choose the Reset Graphic button (looks like a curved                       
                                                                                
                                        arrow pointing at a picture), and then 
click the graphic. If the graphic was larger or higher resolution than what is 
presently displayed in the PPT/DOC file, it will enlarge to its original state 
at import. This will look messy, but just bear with the process. When you 
finish finding and resetting all the graphics, THEN do the save-as-html trick. 
The resulting graphics file will populate with a bunch of image* files.

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