Play back and convert Windows Media on your Mac. Master clips 101 000 yen. For years, Flip4Mac components allowed you to play, import, convert and export Windows Media video and audio files on your Mac and were trusted by millions of Mac users for their stability and professional support. But I'm looking for a long term option where videos embedded with WMV codecs can be played on PowerPoint 2011 for Mac. For reference, I'm using fully updated Office 2011. I'm using Yosemite 10.10.2 on MacBook Air (early 2014). I've installed VLC, which seems to be a stand-alone player that won't help me play videos inside PowerPoint. This PowerPoint Converter is a great Microsoft PowerPoint presentation tool that can convert PowerPoint to video and audio file in almost any formats. All the original elements in PowerPoint can be perfectly retained in this PowerPoint to video conversion, including animation, sounds, movie clips, transitions, internal links, and so on.
UPDATE: 4.April.2018
Powerpoint Wma Codec For Mac 64-bit
Some have reported that this method has stopped working since Sierra. It has, but it seems mostly with the default unarchive that ships with OSX. What will happen is that you will rename to a zip file, and then when you unzip it will turn in to a .cpgz file. If you unzip that it will turn in to a zip file – and it goes round I circles.
For me, I found that if I installed the Unachiver, and then unzipped using that instead, then no problem (the steps below work as described). I hope this helps.
You can download the Unarchiver from their website or the Mac App Store. See download information here: https://theunarchiver.com
Lately I’ve been receiving a number of files in pptx format, but I present using my iPad and so convert these presentations to Keynote. If the slides contain images and text only, this conversion is relatively painless – usually there are just a few formatting and alignment issues that need to be addressed and then I’m good to go. All I need do is open the pptx file in keynote, either on my Mac or iPad, and Keynote handles the conversion quite well.
If, however, the presentation contains media, then this process will not transfer across the video presentations, and I end up with an image snapshot of the video in the slide as a placeholder where the video used to be (or an image of a play symbol, if the media is an audio file).
In order to access media files embedded within pptx files, follow these steps (and they work on both Windows machines and Macs):
Wma Codec Fix Windows 10
Step 1 Make a copy of the pptx file.
Windows Media Player Wma Codec
Step 2 Rename the pptx file – change the extension from ‘pptx’ to ‘zip’.
You will probably get a message warning you about the change of extension. Make sure you allow the change so that the file name will end in ‘.zip’.
Step 3 Extract the zip file (or browse the zip file contents). You will see a directory structure now present in the folder. Navigate to ppt > media and all your image and media files will be present. You can now copy these files (and convert, if necessary) for use in other presentation mediums.