Beautiful presentations for everyone. By everyone.
With its powerful tools and dazzling effects, Keynote makes it easy to create stunning and memorable presentations. You can even use Apple Pencil on your iPad to create diagrams or illustrations that bring your slides to life. And with real‑time collaboration, your team can work together, whether they’re on Mac, iPad, or iPhone, or using a PC.
Jan 31, 2018 - The Windows and Mac versions of PowerPoint are also mostly in parity. That said, there is one feature worth noting that's missing on the.
Download Keynote for Mac from the Mac App StoreDownload Keynote for iOS from the iOS App StorePreview Keynote for iOS in the iOS App StorePreview Keynote for Mac in the Mac App StoreStart using Keynote at iCloud.com
![Mac Mac](https://www.wikihow.com/images/f/ff/Add-a-Video-to-Powerpoint-on-a-Mac-Step-8-Version-2.jpg)
Presentations as polished as your ideas.
Right from the beginning, Keynote sets the stage for a compelling presentation. A clean, intuitive interface puts important tools front and center, so everyone on your team can easily add impressive charts, edit photos, and incorporate cinematic effects. And Rehearse Mode for iPhone or iPad lets you practice on the go, with the current or next slide, notes, and clock — all in one view.
Start with a gorgeous layout.
Choose from over 30 eye‑catching themes that instantly give your presentation a professional look. Or create your own master slides, background images, and page‑by‑page customization.
Make every slide stand out.
Liven up slides with photos, galleries, math equations, charts, and over 700 customizable shapes. Take a photo or scan a document with your iPhone, and Continuity Camera can send it straight to Keynote on your Mac.
Add spectacular transitions and animations.
Animate objects along a path using Apple Pencil or your finger on your iPhone or iPad. Add drama to your presentation with more than 30 cinematic transitions and effects for objects and text, including Magic Move.
See a few examples of Keynote animations
Record and edit audio clips.
Add and adjust narration, notes, and sounds for people to play in your presentations.
Communicate beautifully.
Add some style to your words by filling text with color gradients and even photos — with just a tap.
Play to the crowd with Keynote Live.
With Keynote Live, you can invite many people in different places to watch your presentation in real time on a Mac, iPad, iPhone, or the web. No projector required.
Know what’s on every slide.
In Keynote for macOS, the Object List lets you easily select, edit, and organize objects — no matter how complex the slide.
Keynote and
Apple Pencil.
Add illustrations and handwritten comments for more beautiful presentations with Apple Pencil on your iPad.
Collaborate with anyone.
Anywhere.
Work together in the same presentation, from across town or across the world. You can see your team’s edits as they make them — and they can watch as you make yours, too. Just select a name on the collaborator list to jump to anyone’s cursor.
Work on any presentation. On any device.
You don’t work in one place on just one device. The same goes for Keynote. So the slides your team creates using a Mac or iPad look the same on an iPhone or web browser — and vice versa.
Work together in real time on presentations stored on iCloud or Box.
Everyone can collaborate — whether they’re on Mac, iPad, iPhone, or a PC web browser.
Unlock documents with a touch or a glance.
Open password-protected files in a snap with Touch ID or Face ID on compatible devices.
![Powerpoint download for mac Powerpoint download for mac](/uploads/1/2/5/8/125877406/895194992.png)
Microsoft PowerPoint friendly.
Teaming up with someone who uses Microsoft PowerPoint? Keynote makes it a great working relationship. You can save Keynote documents as PowerPoint files. Or import and edit PowerPoint documents right in Keynote. Most popular PowerPoint features are supported, too. Now it’s no problem to work on the same project. Even if you use different apps.
Learn more about Microsoft PowerPoint compatibilityLearn more about Microsoft PowerPoint compatibility
More ways to do stunning work.
Pages
Create documents that are, in a word, beautiful.
Numbers
Create great-looking spreadsheets. Together.
If you need to create presentations on the Mac and move them to the PC (or vice versa), this is a good place to start. And this is just a start. We'll add more info as we learn more.
And we'll point you to other good sources of information. For example, Jim Gordon's excellent PC to Mac and Back page on OfficeForMacHelp.com
PowerPoint Versions
Before we start, consider that you'll be dealing with different versions of PowerPoint as well as different platforms. This is mainly about PC/Mac issues, so we won't take PowerPoint version differences into account here other than this general set of rules:
We'll ignore versions of PowerPoint prior to 98 (Mac) and 97 (Windows).
- PowerPoint 97 (Windows) is very much like PowerPoint 98 (Mac).
- PowerPoint 2000 (Windows) has no equivalent on Mac, but it only added a few new features to PowerPoint 97. For all practical purposes, you can consider PowerPoint 97 and 2000 (Windows) and PowerPoint 98 (Mac) pretty much the same.
- PowerPoint 2002 (Windows) and PowerPoint 2001 (Mac) both added multiple masters and a lot of other new features and bring the Mac and PC versions into rough equivalence again. 2002/2003 also have motion path animation, supported by the PowerPoint 2003 viewer. Mac PowerPoint versions can't create motion path animations but beginning with PowerPoint 2004 for Mac, presentations with motion path animations created on Windows can be viewed properly on the Mac.
- PowerPoint X (Mac) is roughly equivalent to PowerPoint 2002 (Windows) again. It's the first PowerPoint version that's fully compatible with OS X.
- PowerPoint 2004 (Mac) adds a few new features and better support for the multiple masters and animations on the equivalent Windows versions (PPT 2002 and 2003).
- PowerPoint 2008 (Mac) and PowerPoint 2007 (Windows) are again approximate equivalents. Both use the new Office XML file formats.
- PowerPoint 2011 (Mac) and PowerPoint 2010 (Windows) are once again approximate equivalents, and use the same Office XML file formats as 2008 and 2007.
PowerPoint Viewers
- The PowerPoint 97 Viewer for Windows is effectively the same as PowerPoint 97 (Windows) without VBA.
- The PowerPoint 2003 Viewer for Windows is effectively the same as PowerPoint 2003 (Windows) without VBA.
- The PowerPoint 2007 Viewer for Windows is the same as the PowerPoint 2003 Viewer plus additional compatibility software that allows it to convert PowerPoint 2007 files to 2003 format and open them.
- The Mac Viewer is effectively the same as PowerPoint 98 (Mac) without VBA, so the PowerPoint 97 (Windows) and PowerPoint 98 (Mac) viewers are roughly identical. The Mac Viewer runs only under Mac OS 9 and earlier or in Classic mode, meaning that they no longer work at all in modern versions of MacOS X. There's no later Mac viewer version.
File Formats
PowerPoint 97 through 2003 (Windows) and PowerPoint 98 through 2004 (Mac) share the same file format. They can all open one another's files.
PowerPoint 2007 (Windows) and 2008 (Mac) introduced a new file format based on XML. PowerPoint 2007/2010/2008/2011 can open files from earlier versions and save back to the earlier formats, but it's wise to test with your particular presentation; some features look the same when 'backsaved' but become uneditable.
File compatibility exceptions:
- Windows versions since 2002 can apply password protection to files. Mac PPT 2011 can open password-protected files, but prior versions can't.
- All Windows versions can embed fonts. Mac versions can open files that contain embedded fonts but cannot use the fonts.
PowerPoint 2004 for Mac and later include a new feature that is designed to alleviate many of the common headaches in optimizing presentations for other versions and other platforms. This new Office-wide feature is called Compatibility Report, and can be accessed easily from PowerPoint from the Tools menu.
If you create on Mac, then move to PC
- Don't use overly long filenames for your files and avoid punctuation characters other than dashes ( - ) and underscores ( _ ). Avoid spaces too. Use underscores instead of spaces or use CamelCasingToDistinguishWords. Upper/lower case doesn't matter to Mac or PC, though you'll want to be aware of it if you do much work in Terminal on the Mac, where it can make a difference. But if you know what to do in Terminal, you already knew that.
- Use the appropriate extension ... the part after the period ... in your filenames. If you're saving from PowerPoint 2007/2008/2010/2011 format, use .PPTX, .PPSX, .PPTM etc. If you're saving to an earlier version format or saving from an earlier version, use .PPT or .PPS .
- Quicktime-compressed images won't work on the PC. Don't copy/paste images into PowerPoint. Use Insert, Picture, From File instead. Use JPG or PNG formats for images.
- Quicktime movies seldom work on PCs. Use MPEG or AVI instead. The one exception: if Quicktime and PowerPoint 2010 are installed on the PC, Quicktime movies will play.
- Links to external graphics files will break. Embed all graphics.
- Links to most media files will break UNLESS you copy the media file to the folder where the PowerPoint file is, and only then insert it. See Links break when I move presentation for more information.
- Check Format, Replace Fonts to see what fonts are used in your presentation. You can safely count on Arial, Times New Roman, Courier and Symbol being present on every PC. Tahoma and Verdana will be there on any PC with Office 97 or later, but may not be there if the PC has only the free PowerPoint Viewer. Remember, Mac versions of PowerPoint can't embed fonts or use embedded fonts.
- Use only RGB color for your PowerPoint graphics. PowerPoint will convert CMYK or Pantone colors to RGB anyway. It's better to do it yourself so you can control the conversion. In case that's not a convincing argument, try this: PowerPoint may substitute a red X for CMYK graphics. Ouch. Stick with RGB.
- Ungroup, then regroup imported graphics to convert them to PowerPoint shapes. Do the same to inserted charts if you don't need them to be editable on the other platform.
- Don't squeeze your text too tightly into placeholders. Font substitution and slight differences in text rendering on Mac vs PC can cause your text to get truncated or spill out of too-tight text boxes.
If you create on PC then move to Mac
- Don't use overly long filenames for your files and avoid punctuation characters other than dashes ( - ) and underscores ( _ ). Avoid spaces too. Use underscores instead of spaces or use CamelCasingToDistinguishWords. Upper/lower case doesn't matter to Mac or PC, though you'll want to be aware of it if you do much work in Terminal on the Mac, where it can make a difference. But if you know what to do in Terminal, you already knew that.
- Use the appropriate extension ... the part after the period ... in your filenames. If you're saving from PowerPoint 2007/2008/2010/2011 format, use .PPTX, .PPSX, .PPTM etc. If you're saving to an earlier version format or saving from an earlier version, use .PPT or .PPS .
- Ungroup, then regroup imported graphics to convert them to PowerPoint shapes. Do the same to charts if you don't need them to be editable on the other platform.
- Links to external graphics files will break. Embed all graphics.
- Links to most media files will break UNLESS you copy the media file to the folder where the PowerPoint file is, and only then insert it. See Links break when I move presentation for more information.
- Don't use WMV (Windows Media Player) files for movies or sounds. AVI or MPEG are better choices. WMP9 for Mac FAQ explains why and offers some workarounds. Several knowledgeable Mac users have suggested third party products such as Flip4Mac to enable Windows Media Player files on Mac.
- Watch your fonts. Check Format, Replace Fonts to see what fonts are used in your presentation. You can safely count on Arial, Times New Roman, Courier and Symbol being present on most Macs. Tahoma and Verdana will be on any PC with Office installed, but may not be present if the Mac has only the free PowerPoint Viewer. Mac versions of PowerPoint can't use embedded fonts.
- Don't squeeze your text too tightly into placeholders. Font substitution and slight differences in text rendering on Mac vs PC can cause your text to get truncated or spill out of too-tight text boxes.
X-Platform in either direction, PC to Mac or Mac to PC
- Embedded objects (Word tables, Excel charts/sheets, graphs, etc.) may not translate well. Wherever possible, use the tools built into PowerPoint (ie, PowerPoint's table editor in PPT2000 and up on PC, PPT-X and up on Mac) rather than objects created in external programs.
- If you must use objects from external apps, ungroup then immediately regroup them before you send them to the other platform. This converts them to PowerPoint shapes. If they don't ungroup cleanly, it's a near-sure thing that they'd have caused problems on the other platform anyhow. Treat ungrouping as an Early Warning System.
- Whereas PowerPoint for Mac uses QuickTime to handle audio and video, the Windows version uses built-in Windows functions, which greatly limits the number of file types that can be viewed on both platforms (only a few, like MPEG and AVI can be handled on both). More information on this here
- Fonts are 'encoded' differently on PCs and Macs. That can cause some characters to change or disappear when your files move between platforms. See Mac vs. PC Character Encoding for more information and a PDF that includes a chart comparing the two encoding systems.
- Slide Shows - when you view a Kiosk Mode slide show on the PC, you can use the Tab key to move from one hyperlink to the next and the Enter key to activate the hyperlink. This doesn't work on Mac.