We have a new led screen but unable to detect MS PowerPoint how to resolve it? It's a Led vision from china....












-1















We have a new led screen but unable to detect MS PowerPoint how to resolve it? It's a Led vision from china. TIA Ledvision 6.0










share|improve this question























  • We're missing some critical data. A monitor just displays whatever pixels your graphics card tells it to display. It has no idea what the source is. Some TVs can display some types of files contained on a USB drive. What they can display depends on their built-in software. If that's what the picture is showing, it means the TV doesn't know how to convert Powerpoint files for display. You would need to convert it yourself on your computer to some format the TV can handle. But there isn't enough information here to know what we're looking at.

    – fixer1234
    Jan 28 at 8:21











  • It looks like LEDVISION is software, but it isn't obvious what platform it runs on, or what purpose it serves.

    – fixer1234
    Jan 28 at 8:25











  • But in another laptop it can display MS PowerPoint. (Win8.1)

    – user990841
    Jan 28 at 8:32











  • In my Win10 my MS PowerPoint is not activated

    – user990841
    Jan 28 at 8:33






  • 1





    You need to provide more context for people to know what you're talking about. What computers? What LED screen? What is the software and where is it running? What is the purpose of the software? etc.

    – fixer1234
    Jan 28 at 8:38
















-1















We have a new led screen but unable to detect MS PowerPoint how to resolve it? It's a Led vision from china. TIA Ledvision 6.0










share|improve this question























  • We're missing some critical data. A monitor just displays whatever pixels your graphics card tells it to display. It has no idea what the source is. Some TVs can display some types of files contained on a USB drive. What they can display depends on their built-in software. If that's what the picture is showing, it means the TV doesn't know how to convert Powerpoint files for display. You would need to convert it yourself on your computer to some format the TV can handle. But there isn't enough information here to know what we're looking at.

    – fixer1234
    Jan 28 at 8:21











  • It looks like LEDVISION is software, but it isn't obvious what platform it runs on, or what purpose it serves.

    – fixer1234
    Jan 28 at 8:25











  • But in another laptop it can display MS PowerPoint. (Win8.1)

    – user990841
    Jan 28 at 8:32











  • In my Win10 my MS PowerPoint is not activated

    – user990841
    Jan 28 at 8:33






  • 1





    You need to provide more context for people to know what you're talking about. What computers? What LED screen? What is the software and where is it running? What is the purpose of the software? etc.

    – fixer1234
    Jan 28 at 8:38














-1












-1








-1








We have a new led screen but unable to detect MS PowerPoint how to resolve it? It's a Led vision from china. TIA Ledvision 6.0










share|improve this question














We have a new led screen but unable to detect MS PowerPoint how to resolve it? It's a Led vision from china. TIA Ledvision 6.0







windows-10






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jan 28 at 7:56









user990841user990841

1




1













  • We're missing some critical data. A monitor just displays whatever pixels your graphics card tells it to display. It has no idea what the source is. Some TVs can display some types of files contained on a USB drive. What they can display depends on their built-in software. If that's what the picture is showing, it means the TV doesn't know how to convert Powerpoint files for display. You would need to convert it yourself on your computer to some format the TV can handle. But there isn't enough information here to know what we're looking at.

    – fixer1234
    Jan 28 at 8:21











  • It looks like LEDVISION is software, but it isn't obvious what platform it runs on, or what purpose it serves.

    – fixer1234
    Jan 28 at 8:25











  • But in another laptop it can display MS PowerPoint. (Win8.1)

    – user990841
    Jan 28 at 8:32











  • In my Win10 my MS PowerPoint is not activated

    – user990841
    Jan 28 at 8:33






  • 1





    You need to provide more context for people to know what you're talking about. What computers? What LED screen? What is the software and where is it running? What is the purpose of the software? etc.

    – fixer1234
    Jan 28 at 8:38



















  • We're missing some critical data. A monitor just displays whatever pixels your graphics card tells it to display. It has no idea what the source is. Some TVs can display some types of files contained on a USB drive. What they can display depends on their built-in software. If that's what the picture is showing, it means the TV doesn't know how to convert Powerpoint files for display. You would need to convert it yourself on your computer to some format the TV can handle. But there isn't enough information here to know what we're looking at.

    – fixer1234
    Jan 28 at 8:21











  • It looks like LEDVISION is software, but it isn't obvious what platform it runs on, or what purpose it serves.

    – fixer1234
    Jan 28 at 8:25











  • But in another laptop it can display MS PowerPoint. (Win8.1)

    – user990841
    Jan 28 at 8:32











  • In my Win10 my MS PowerPoint is not activated

    – user990841
    Jan 28 at 8:33






  • 1





    You need to provide more context for people to know what you're talking about. What computers? What LED screen? What is the software and where is it running? What is the purpose of the software? etc.

    – fixer1234
    Jan 28 at 8:38

















We're missing some critical data. A monitor just displays whatever pixels your graphics card tells it to display. It has no idea what the source is. Some TVs can display some types of files contained on a USB drive. What they can display depends on their built-in software. If that's what the picture is showing, it means the TV doesn't know how to convert Powerpoint files for display. You would need to convert it yourself on your computer to some format the TV can handle. But there isn't enough information here to know what we're looking at.

– fixer1234
Jan 28 at 8:21





We're missing some critical data. A monitor just displays whatever pixels your graphics card tells it to display. It has no idea what the source is. Some TVs can display some types of files contained on a USB drive. What they can display depends on their built-in software. If that's what the picture is showing, it means the TV doesn't know how to convert Powerpoint files for display. You would need to convert it yourself on your computer to some format the TV can handle. But there isn't enough information here to know what we're looking at.

– fixer1234
Jan 28 at 8:21













It looks like LEDVISION is software, but it isn't obvious what platform it runs on, or what purpose it serves.

– fixer1234
Jan 28 at 8:25





It looks like LEDVISION is software, but it isn't obvious what platform it runs on, or what purpose it serves.

– fixer1234
Jan 28 at 8:25













But in another laptop it can display MS PowerPoint. (Win8.1)

– user990841
Jan 28 at 8:32





But in another laptop it can display MS PowerPoint. (Win8.1)

– user990841
Jan 28 at 8:32













In my Win10 my MS PowerPoint is not activated

– user990841
Jan 28 at 8:33





In my Win10 my MS PowerPoint is not activated

– user990841
Jan 28 at 8:33




1




1





You need to provide more context for people to know what you're talking about. What computers? What LED screen? What is the software and where is it running? What is the purpose of the software? etc.

– fixer1234
Jan 28 at 8:38





You need to provide more context for people to know what you're talking about. What computers? What LED screen? What is the software and where is it running? What is the purpose of the software? etc.

– fixer1234
Jan 28 at 8:38










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