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Object Linking and Embedding (OLE) is a proprietary technology developed by Microsoft that allows embedding and linking to documents and other objects. For developers, it brought OLE Control Extension (OCX), a way to develop and use custom user interface elements.
Innovations included: multiple slides in a single file, organizing slides with a slide sorter view and a title view (precursor of outline view), speakers' notes pages attached to each slide, printing of audience handouts with multiple slides per page, text with outlining styles and full word-processor formatting, graphic shapes with attached ...
The HTML specification does not specify which video and audio formats browsers should support. User agents are free to support any video formats they feel are appropriate, but content authors cannot assume that any video will be accessible by all complying user agents, since user agents have no minimal set of video and audio formats to support.
In computing, a presentation program (also called presentation software) is a software package used to display information in the form of a slide show. It has three major functions: [1] an editor that allows text to be inserted and formatted; a method for inserting and manipulating graphic images and media clips; a slide-show system to display ...
LibreOffice is able to open and save Office Open XML files. [45] Apache OpenOffice from version 3.0 can import Office Open XML files but not save them. [46] Version 3.2 improved this feature with read support even for password-protected Office Open XML files. [47] [48] [49] The Go-oo fork of OpenOffice could also write OOXML files.
Overhead. This is the difference in file-size between two files with the same content in a different container. Support for advanced codec functionality. Older formats such as AVI do not support new codec features like B-frames, VBR audio or VFR video natively. The format may be "hacked" to add support, but this creates compatibility problems.
Embedding, installing media into a text document to form a compound document <embed></embed>, a HyperText Markup Language (HTML) element that inserts a non-standard object into the HTML document; Web embed, an element of a host web page that is substantially independent of the host page
Office Open XML does not use mixed content but uses elements to put a series of text runs (element name r) into paragraphs (element name p). The result is terse [citation needed] and highly nested in contrast to HTML, for example, which is fairly flat, designed for humans to write in text editors and is more congenial for humans to read.