From: Dennile on 2 Apr 2010 03:33 Recently I got a PDF file, which is generated from PDF. I want to recover it. How to do it? I have install Adobe Reader and PowerPoint 2007 -- Dennile
From: LVTravel on 2 Apr 2010 09:16 "Dennile" <Dennile.5fb685c(a)officefrustration.com> wrote in message news:Dennile.5fb685c(a)officefrustration.com... > > Recently I got a PDF file, which is generated from PDF. I want to > recover it. How to do it? I have install Adobe Reader and PowerPoint > 2007 > > > > > -- > Dennile Do a Google search for PDF to PPT converter. You will find many sites to go to download and test the various converters on the market. Haven't tried any so good luck. Just practice safe hex when you do the downloads. Be aware that many of the "free to download" products trial software will not actually save the PPT file, it will only go through the motions of the extraction and you have to buy the program to actually get it to save the PPT file.
From: jpforestier on 2 Apr 2010 10:17 I use "AnyBizSoft PDF to PowerPoint" and am quite satisfied "Dennile" <Dennile.5fb685c(a)officefrustration.com> a �crit dans le message de news: Dennile.5fb685c(a)officefrustration.com... > > Recently I got a PDF file, which is generated from PDF. I want to > recover it. How to do it? I have install Adobe Reader and PowerPoint > 2007 > > > > > -- > Dennile
From: Matt Schuster on 2 Apr 2010 10:48 Depending on how much work effort (reformatting) you want to put in *AND* if the PDF was generated by a good PDF generator (that is one that "respects" formatting), it may be as simple as just using Adobe Acrobat Reader to open the PDF, select all text and paste into PPT (or Word if you prefer). This of course assumes the PDF allows content copying. If that doesn't work, as others suggest find a converter. If you're still not comfortable with the free/downloadable converters, you could always download a trial version of Adobe Acrobat Professional (I think its good for 60 days). Acrobat Pro does an EXCELLENT job of reverting PDFs back into Office formats. Its not automatic though. Open the PDF, then "Save As...", suggested formats from there would be either .DOC, RTF or .XML. Then open that file from PPT. A little warning here, the trial of Acrobat Pro is probably about 700MB. HTH.
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