Activex OLE Delphi

Title: PowerPoint 2003 Presentation Crashes On Saving
Question: Data loss, in these situations, can be tackled easily if you have an updated and clean backup copy. But, in case the backup copy is not valid or itself corrupt, you have no better way than choosing a third-party PowerPoint recovery software.
Answer:
Being an extensive user of Microsoft PowerPoint, you are aware of
the amount of efforts which goes in making a presentation. After
toiling, you would never want a presentation to crash or disappear in
an unusual manner. Sadly, this is not an imaginary situation.
PowerPoint presentations often experience crash and leave data
inaccessible, thus rendering you helpless. Frequent crashes and
appearance of error messages are reasons enough to predict that a
presentation in question is corrupt. A corrupt presentation exhibits
strange behavior and leads to serious data loss problems. Data loss,
in these situations, can be tackled easily if you have an updated and
clean backup copy. But, in case the backup copy is not valid or
itself corrupt, you have no better way than choosing a third-party
BPowerPoint recovery/B software.br
Consider a situation, wherein, you have a PowerPoint 2003
presentation packed with graphics and charts - to be presented in a
college seminar. A day before the D-day, you make some changes to the
original text and add some more inputs to make the presentation all
the more compelling. While you try and save the presentation, the
following error message occurs and startles you:br
IPowerPoint has encountered a problem and needs to close.
We are sorry for theBRinconvenience/I.
br
IThis error occurs with the following signature:BRAppName:
powerpnt.exe App ver 11.0.8227.0 AppStamp: 486d6096BRModName:
ixodma32.dll ModVer: 5.1.2003.628 ModStamp: 3efe39e4BRfDebug:0
Offset: 0015473 /I
br
When you try and open the file again, you find out that it is not
reflecting the changes you made the last time. Additionally, the
presentation contains some junk characters and its formatting is
screwed up completely.br
BCause/Bbr
The reasons behind the unexpected behavior could be the following:br
UL TYPE=DISC
LIPresence of an add-in (s) which is prompting the PowerPoint
to behave in an abrupt manner
br
LICorruption of the presentation file due to reasons like power
fluctuations, application malfunction, virus attacks and others
br
/UL
BResolution/Bbr
The following BPPT recovery/B steps must be considered to
resolve the problem:br
UL TYPE=DISC
LIDisable any add-in (s)
br
LIIf you suspect the file to be corrupt, you can insert the
slides into a blank presentation, and then apply the damaged
presentation as a template.
br
LIAlternatively, you can copy and paste the slides from the
damaged presentation to a new blank presentation.
br
LIIf you detect severe corruption, the only way to recover the
data is saving the presentation in RTF format
br
LIIf nothing seems working, then you should immediately grab a
A HREF="http://www.stellarinfo.com/powerpoint-recovery.htm"BPowerPoint
recovery/B/A application.
br
/UL
For safe and best repairing results, you should trust Stellar
Phoenix PowerPoint Recovery. The application repairs and effectively
recovers damaged/corrupt presentations created with Microsoft
PowerPoint 2007, 2003, 2002, and 2000. The BA HREF="http://www.stellarinfo.com/powerpoint-recovery.htm"PPT
recovery/A /Bsoftware retrieves headers, footers, images, text
and all other components.