ID: Q157212
The information in this article applies to:
If you try to import a large .bmp, .pcx, .tif, or .tga picture into a PowerPoint slide, it may import as a very large white rectangle.
PowerPoint's graphic import filters convert these picture formats to generic Windows Metafile data. The import filters then pass this generic data to PowerPoint. This conversion removes any data compression the picture may have. For example, a compressed 24-bit color .tga file that is 4,000 pixels wide by 3,000 pixels tall may fit on a single 1.44 MB disk, but it converts into more than 30 MB of Windows Metafile data.
If you do not have enough memory or disk space to handle this conversion, the picture imports as a blank rectangle into PowerPoint.
If you must import a large image into PowerPoint, try saving it as a JPEG (.jpg) file. PowerPoint 97 handles JPEG files directly (it does not have to convert them), so PowerPoint can handle JPEG files which contain more data than other image formats.
Microsoft has confirmed this to be a problem in the Microsoft products listed at the beginning of this article.
Additional query words: 97 8.00 ppt8 big targa tiff bitmap publisher's paintbrush zsoft
Keywords : kbgraphic kbinterop
Version : 97
Platform : WINDOWS
Last Reviewed: November 30, 1998