

You send a link (URL) to your audience, and then everyone you've invited watches a synchronized view of your slide show in their browser. In PowerPoint 2010, the Broadcast Slide Show feature in PowerPoint 2010 lets you share a slide show with anyone, anywhere, over the web. A Microsoft account (,, msn.com, ) can be used with the Microsoft PowerPoint Broadcast service in PowerPoint 2013 and later. If you have an output dongle attached to iPad (or mac) you can output presentation to play through hdmi port on a tv or large screen.Note: You'll need a hosted broadcast service provided by your organization to broadcast your PowerPoint presentation to a remote audience.You can also use colored pens or highlighter to annotate the presentation. One the iPhone screen, you can select the annotation tool to move a pointer that will appear in iPad screen.You can then advance the presentation or reverse it by touching or swiping on iPhone. the presentation will start to play on the iPad and you’ll see a miniature version of the presentation on the iPhone.Back in the iPhone, follow pairing instructions.Go back to remote settings menu on iPad and pair with iPhone.on the iPhone, in the Keynote app, select the iPhone icon in the upper right hand corner of screen.on the iPad, click the three periods in the upper right hand corner of screen and, in the drop down menu, select, “allow remote control”.make sure both the iPad (or Mac) and iPhone are on same WiFi network or that both are connected via Bluetooth.Open presentation in Keynote on a Mac or iPad.You can absolutely do this with an iPhone as the remote controller and either an iPad or a Mac computer as the presentation device As long as you open the PowerPoint presentation in Apple’s keynote app. (Note: this isn't the "Smart" keyboard that physically connects to iPad Pro.) Carrying the wireless keyboard around is not as cumbersome as it may sound, and I generally just set it on a nearby desk wherever I was speaking, which was vastly preferable to being stuck within reach of the iPad. So here's what I figured out: You can pair an Apple wireless "Magic" keyboard to the iPad, then use the arrow buttons on the keyboard to advance the Powerpoint as you walk around the room. But there was no way to control the presentation remotely (from iPhone or other remote), unless I converted the Powerpoint to Keynote, which I was not willing to do because the conversion was messy and made unwanted changes/substitutions. I taught a six-week class this past winter and wanted to host Powerpoint presentations from my iPad mini, which was tethered to the projection setup with a Lightning-to-HDMI cable. I have tussled with this as well and found a work-around solution you may find acceptable.
