Advanced 3D Model Camera Settings in PowerPoint - Flyover Effect

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  • čas přidán 31. 10. 2019
  • Zoom and fly into your 3D models in PowerPoint using the advanced camera settings! Explore the camera position options, as well as the look-at point and field of view (FOV) angle. It works really well on a 3D model with a lot of detail inside, such as this castle that you can fly into.
    To castle and knight models were simply found natively in PowerPoint by going to Insert - 3D Models - From Online Sources.
    If you’d like to download the castle with the knight included, check out this link here: bit.ly/36s67on
    Enjoy!
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Komentáře • 55

  • @MedAnimations
    @MedAnimations Před 11 měsíci +1

    3D in PowerPoint??2? This acutally pretty advanced yet impressive! Amazing job :DD

    • @powerpointspice
      @powerpointspice  Před 9 měsíci

      Yep 3D in powerpoint is such an underrated capability! Thanks for watching and commenting 🚀🚀

    • @MedAnimations
      @MedAnimations Před 9 měsíci

      @@powerpointspice No problem :))

  • @NinaRossBusiness
    @NinaRossBusiness Před 4 lety +5

    Great demo video! PowerPoint is so underutilized. Thank you for sharing.

    • @powerpointspice
      @powerpointspice  Před 4 lety +2

      Totally agree! Thanks for watching and commenting, Nina. So glad you enjoyed.

  • @pptspeedtraining
    @pptspeedtraining Před 4 lety +1

    This is so cool! What a neat intro animation, and a super helpful explanation of the different options and camera angles! Thanks Lia.

    • @powerpointspice
      @powerpointspice  Před 4 lety

      Thanks so much!! Yes it needed to be done - it took me a while to figure out properly so hopefully saves others time :).

  • @hingsam7006
    @hingsam7006 Před 4 lety +1

    It is great! I have learn more from your PowerPoint Spice. Thanks for sharing

  • @saeedehmofidi
    @saeedehmofidi Před 3 lety

    thank you so much for this!

  • @hasbullahalaeidrus938
    @hasbullahalaeidrus938 Před 4 lety

    I learn something new today. Great tutorial. Thank you 🇸🇬

    • @powerpointspice
      @powerpointspice  Před 4 lety +1

      So glad it was informative! Thanks for the comment, Anuar.

  • @madelinecc2299
    @madelinecc2299 Před 4 lety

    awesome! thank you!

  • @deborah8607
    @deborah8607 Před 2 lety +1

    Inspirational!! 🙏 ❤

  • @pembertonrob
    @pembertonrob Před rokem +1

    Love your videos

    • @powerpointspice
      @powerpointspice  Před rokem +1

      Thanks! I just posted a new one you may want to check out as well. Appreciate it!!

  • @intanlarasati-7500
    @intanlarasati-7500 Před 3 lety

    wow thank you so much for this!

  • @jeffrymellinger2807
    @jeffrymellinger2807 Před 4 lety

    Good job! I used PP regularly and didn't know it could do this

    • @powerpointspice
      @powerpointspice  Před 4 lety

      Yes, it has SO many underused features ! That's why I strive to spread the word. Thanks for the comment, Jeffry!

  • @haidaraliartgraphics
    @haidaraliartgraphics Před 4 lety

    Good Video from Powerpoint

  • @diamondgirll01
    @diamondgirll01 Před 4 lety

    Thank you 🌻

  • @aggsik4
    @aggsik4 Před 4 lety

    hello helloo hello !This is awesome!

    • @powerpointspice
      @powerpointspice  Před 4 lety

      Hi Olga - glad to see you again and hope you’re doing great! Glad you liked - this would be great for exploring models in the classroom.

    • @aggsik4
      @aggsik4 Před 4 lety

      @@powerpointspice if you ever want to see my work , you can visit me here www.flickr.com/photos/olgavareli/ .It is not power point, but this is what I do in my free time.I have always watched you, you have made my students be amazed by the new things you have taught me.This is a ten star tutorial once more.

  • @lillolodi
    @lillolodi Před 4 lety

    Amazing tutorial..no tutorial about camera movement in CZcams. You are the only one. Great tutorial..I would have a little question. Is it possible to add some hypertextual link? And is it possible to move the camera with arrow of keyboard? Or inserting a digital button in the slide?Thank you so much. Very compliment

    • @powerpointspice
      @powerpointspice  Před 4 lety

      Hi Lillolodi - thanks for the comment, and yes, I don't know about other tutorials like this. 3D models in PowerPoint are generally very underused, but it is something I am focusing on, as I do believe they are the future of visual communication. You can definitely add interactivity with hyperlinks / triggers / buttons the same way you would do it in PowerPoint normally. You would just have to make the link go to the slide you want - and if you add a morph transition to it, it will be a smooth transition like here. Here is an example of how to add triggers:
      czcams.com/video/k4Or-Cd3Kyg/video.html

  • @imitech1536
    @imitech1536 Před 4 lety

    Wow

  • @taibasuleman2254
    @taibasuleman2254 Před 2 lety

    I dont find 3d models in 365 powerpoint plz help your explanation was excellent and i want to use these features also

  • @GM-ud6ur
    @GM-ud6ur Před 4 lety

    thank you so much ; can i use this option on powerpoint 2016

    • @jumongandpudong
      @jumongandpudong Před rokem

      Sadly You Can't Get 3D Models In PowerPoint 2016 Although You Can Make The 3D Model Using 3D Bevel And Play Around With The Settings Or Make Your Model In Paint 3D Copy It And Paste It As Image

  • @JadeJohnsonIndustries
    @JadeJohnsonIndustries Před 3 lety +1

    So essentially, you're telling me, that if I crammed in some extra-close-studying of this tutorial, and applied what I learned directly in PowerPoint, along with having created my own custom 3D-world-sector-models that I could use to maximize the usefulness of this feature, I could get an open-world-action-RPG out of PPT; complete with manually-implemented-location-based-smart-rendering, hyperlink-driven-world-navigation, and a near-realtime-quicktime-event-based-battle-engine! Is that really the case? In POWERPOINT!? :D

  • @HyborianAge
    @HyborianAge Před 4 lety

    A couple of days ago my powerpoint started looking different and today it's totally unusable. What happened? Do i need to update it? Same with Word. Where do I go?

    • @powerpointspice
      @powerpointspice  Před 4 lety

      That’s weird! I’m not an expert in tech support but I would try to update it if you can or reinstall entirely. I’m quite connected to the PPT team and haven’t heard of any strange glitches going around.

  • @couponatak77
    @couponatak77 Před 4 lety

    Like

  • @ignatiusloyolamulti1186

    can someone help me, there's this model that I used, it was an fbx file. The moment I tried to move the model, the entire screen lagged like crazy. can someone help me?

    • @powerpointspice
      @powerpointspice  Před 3 lety

      Could you restart your computer and try again? Large models often blow up ppt.

  • @godsvoice9405
    @godsvoice9405 Před 4 lety

    How u created drone part?

  • @whatthefact4131
    @whatthefact4131 Před 4 lety

    l have ms office 2019 but 3d models not working it is disabled i tried evething but is not working can you help me ???

    • @powerpointspice
      @powerpointspice  Před 4 lety

      Weird - are you on a Mac? What does it mean disabled? Is it greyed out?

    • @whatthefact4131
      @whatthefact4131 Před 4 lety

      @@powerpointspice yeah im in windows and it is greyed out liket it have been turned off

    • @powerpointspice
      @powerpointspice  Před 4 lety

      I spoke to Microsoft / ppt team about this today - are you on an enterprise machine? Sometimes IT can grey that out. Also what country are you in? There are apparently some locations that aren’t fully able to deploy 3D models.

    • @whatthefact4131
      @whatthefact4131 Před 4 lety

      @@powerpointspice thank you. i alredy solved this problem

    • @powerpointspice
      @powerpointspice  Před 4 lety

      Ok great

  • @chriss2595
    @chriss2595 Před 4 lety +1

    I'm not sure if 3D models in PowerPoint are an added value. Besides this, a lot of models have ugly jagged lines and look cartoonish. Are companies waiting for this in their presentations?
    There are a lot of nice 3D isometric models online which give fantastisc results with the (also fantastic) morph function.
    A really added value within PowerPoint would be real 3D objects from e.g. Google earth where we can zoom in into our own office...

    • @powerpointspice
      @powerpointspice  Před 4 lety +2

      A few thoughts - I believe we are still in the very eary stages of the 3D model age. There are currently some models (from Microsoft) that look really professional (like the earth models), and others are indeed quite cartoonish (like the animated mushroom ninja). The only companies creating a "pull" for 3D models right now are ones that have their own proprietary ones (like engine models, custom product models, etc.) that they'd like to integrate into the slides. Few companies are requesting them for design's sake. However, once there is a broader and more accessible marketplace for 3D models (i.e., when it's just as easy to find a relevant 3D model as it is to get a stock photo), it will eventually become very common to integrate them. This transition will also be fueled by the AR/VR markets, as artists will be building 3D models for that use as well. Given it's still the earily days, those who DO find a way to use 3D models impactfully will stand out in a big way as presenters.

    • @chriss2595
      @chriss2595 Před 4 lety

      @@powerpointspice I can understand that you are very enthousiastic about 3D. I doubt if we are in the early stage of 3D. 3D programs exist since many years and there are a ton of 3D models out there. As far as PowerPoint is concerned: 80% or more companies/organisations don't know how to make decent presentations, let alone how to integrate 3D models. Besides this, presentations are all about storytelling, let's not forget this, it's not 3D that presenters will make stand out. At this moment, 3D for PowerPoint is a nice try, nothing more. Perhaps the software should evolve also. And I expect that big companies will go for movies which will be easier and easier to produce, so they're more likely to integrate 3D in movies. I'm not convinced that 3D will be the next big thing; 3D movies e.g. are not that amazing, on the contrary. I saw Avatar in 3D and I wasn't blown away, I still prefer 2D movies.
      You are talking about AR/VR, okay, but that's a whole other market than presentation soft.
      I'm sorry, you don't convince me, and especially not the use with(in) PowerPoint.

    • @charlescranford1011
      @charlescranford1011 Před 3 lety +1

      @@chriss2595 I use 3D models as I teach (professionally) companies about high-powered WiFi networks. Using 3D models has become even more important to me in my online delivery as I am looking for ways to keep students mentally engaged for four days. I contracted with a 3D artist to convert the (real-world) radios into 3D models so that when I teach about different aspects of the radio I can pan/morph to where that switch is on the radio, and show how to turn the radio around to get to it. My students have been very positive about how it helps them grasp what I'm talking about (versus just having a couple of pictures where they have to figure out how to get from picture 1 to picture 2.
      YMMV, but, for me, 3D is a benefit (in showing where to make changes to the radio), an attention-getter (for the students), and a differentiator (for my client - as nobody in their company is doing this and none of my competitors are offering this).
      Good Luck!

    • @chriss2595
      @chriss2595 Před 3 lety

      @@charlescranford1011 Of course it's a benefit, and what you say is an excellent example! I never said it's not useful, I only ment that 3D must be practical, not a gimmick. One of our departments work for years with 3D models (architecture).