5 Free Online Slideshow Creation Tools – Let’s Put On A Show On Facebook!
Looking at pictures of the family picnic can get pretty boring as you open one file, close it and open the next picture file. Wouldn’t it be cooler if you can create your own slideshow – displaying one picture after another, in sequence and at the pace you choose? It makes sense to viewers, that’s for sure. Especially if we’re talking about an instructional slideshow or a professional looking business presentation.
You want to look good and you want the visual information properly sequenced and paced to suit your purposes, whether it’s to entertain, educate or to show a new employee how to insert Tab A into Slot B.
You can purchase slideshow software but why would you when there are so many open source software apps and tools available, as in FREE. Here are some of my favorites. Try them. One of them will become your favorite. Guaranteed.
Roll ‘em.
1. Smilebox
I’m amazed at how deep in features Smilebox is. It does almost everything you could want:
* choose from 100s of predesigned templates
* design a slideshow for a specific occasion like a birthday or wedding reception
* integrate stills, digital video clips, narration and even a music bed and sound FX
* output the finished slideshow to an email, print it out or burn to a DVD with a click
* import files from any source – just browse your way to the best looking presentation ever
The interface is totally user friendly, making it easy to upload files and place them on the time line. You can also mix audio to create a narrated presentation complete with music – all in just a few minutes.
Smilebox is perfect for making personalized e-cards, online scrapbooks, photo albums, business quality presentations for upload to a client’s site – the list is endless.
And the cost? Zip. You’ll love how easy Smilebox makes slideshow creation. Even more, you’ll love how good your pictures look – especially when you provide a little narration to describe each shot.
Smilebox is one cool, photo sharing tool.
2. Photozig
Photozig does deliver a robust slideshow creator but there’s more to this download than putting on a good looking slideshow.
Photozig is also a great tool for organizing your picture files, using a “slide tray” to display all of your images. You can save pictures to different folders, create multimedia presentations, download complete folder contents to the time line for easy picture manipulation and edit your pictures with a centering and crop tool that lets you show your best side.
Photozig also lets you create personalized or business-oriented screensavers, wallpapers, DVDs and CDs. I’ve used Photozig a few times now and each time I do I discover more features and more functionality.
This slideshow editor gets two thumbs up from this reviewer.
3. Microsoft’s Photo Story 3
You know MS has to stake a claim in the photo editing realm and Photo Story 3 puts Microsoft on my “best of” list for the simple reason that it configures seamlessly with other Microsoft apps. It’s made by MS so it works with all other Microsoft image manipulation tools running in Windows XP.
The basic, home edition is pretty robust, but if you’re serious about your presentations, Microsoft also offers an MS Media Center edition, a special net book edition and a somewhat pricey professional edition for businesses that need more than PowerPoint.
The pro version is more than you need to create a slideshow for grandma, but for professionals who blog or otherwise work in the web world, Photo Story 3 puts control of your pix in your hands.
Try it, all you fans of MS. You’ll like the way it syncs up with all your other Microsoft tools.
4. PhotoStage
PhotoStage is made by NCH Software and it comes with a basketful of goodies.
First, there’s a complete, intuitive photo editor that simplifies preloading – something you’ll appreciate and a feature missing from some other free slideshow creators. You can zoom in or out, crop images, auto enhance and otherwise manipulate your pictures to suit your artistic preferences or your instructional needs. And it’s easy to use the PhotoStage editor.
Second, your finished slideshow can be output to DVD for viewing on any TV monitor (including high-def flat screens) or PSP, send your slide deck to any mobile device automatically, add vid-clips and more.
Finally, PhotoStage is 100% compatible with Vista based apps. You can add 100s of different pictures to create visual interest and keep your audience engaged, while looking every bit the professional in the process with a full slate of transition options.
Fun, fast and simple. This MS based slide sorter is a favorite.
5.
Most bloggers are familiar with Picasa – part of the Google Apps suite. It’s Google’s answer to Microsoft’s Photo Story product line and, I must say, it’s a handy little tool to download. FREE.
Unlike a lot of other OSS image creation software, Picasa has a lot of editing options that simplify photo editing and slideshow creation. For example, there’s an Auto Color option that optimizes the colors, even in scanned images in low res formats like gifs.
Picasa comes with an Auto Contrast feature, a Redeye compensator, a simple alignment tool, a border creation tool, templates and other fun stuff to simplify slideshow creation and photo editing.
I especially recommend Picasa for those shutterbugs who are using older digital cameras with lower res than the standards of today. The automated enhancement features “fill-in” the holes in your source materials making lower res images crystal clear. You’ll never have to delete an older photo. Just open it in Picasa, click the auto enhance features and even your old pix will pop on any HD screen.
I’ve used all of these tools for different purposes – from creating a family photo album to creating slideshows for enterprise tier corporate clients. Check ‘em out. One of these is perfect, whatever your slideshow creation needs.
And….cut.
I was actually looking for some slideshow tools. Thanks a lot for sharing.
btw, your blog looks really awesome.
how did you get your thumbnail to drag out and share on facebook, twitter and such?
I’ve seen this feature on smashing magazine as well as your tool bar on the bottom of the page.
is this a plunin? do you mind sharing with me?
i’ll tune in to your blog from now on. seems like you’re pretty good at what u do.
keep up the good work.
thanks again for sharing.
It’s a plugin from Meebo, you can see it here http://bar.meebo.com/
whats up
Thank you very much for sharing these 5 great tools, I was actually looking for something like this to prepare for a local event. You just made my day, and great blog btw, I will definitely come back to check often.
Like to me
Thank you so much! I’m a therapist, and not very techie (yet) but I have a MacBook running Tiger and 4 intimidated, senior and/or new age clients who want me to help them learn Facebook, Twitter…and help them build website. I created a website of my own. I started with webs.com and now I’m studying Word Press to start a blog. One client has a slide show, at the moment hosted by Picasa. We’d both like to know how we can post a slide show to start automatically (and hopefully size it to fill the page or column horizontally), probably on webs, possibly on Word Press. I can cut and paste HTML–that’s about the size of my skills.
CSS is on my list to learn, eventually, but I need more weeks in my day to learn everything! Would appreciate a blog with any sites for beginners to learn code for website building, if you have any to review. Anyway, thanks for listening, thanks again for your generosity in sharing your knowledge, and especially for your blogging–I’m learning a lot!
hey that was extra good. i haave luved it
I LOVE U SPORT
thank……..
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i need it