I saw something like this in another forum. You can paste dates as links which will allow you to fix a start-end date relationship.
- Copy the finish date from task 201
- Right-click the start date for task 202 and choose paste special
- Select the "Link" radio button and click OK
This should link the two together so that one changing will immediately update the other.
The easiest way is to use the native Windows Ctrl-PrtScn button combination. This creates a bitmap image of the current Window in the clipboard.
You then switch to PowerPoint and paste the image in.
Of course, this leaves you with the MS Project interface in the image as well. So you then need to trim the image in Powerpoint. Alternatively, you can go to full-screen in Project before doing Ctrl-PrtScn.
If that is too many steps for you. I would recommend using a screen capture tool. If you are a Microsoft Office user, see if you have access to Microsoft OneNote which includes a quick screen-grab shortcut. Windows 7 also has the Snipping Tool which might be helpful.
UPDATE
There is also (or at least there used to be - I can't check whether it is still there in 2010 at the moment) a snapshot button in Project itself which captures an image of the current chart without Project's interface. The button looks like a camera.
Another possible alternative is to print to PDF. This would then let you either insert direct to PowerPoint or open and copy a selected part of the image. Though this isn't at all easier than doing a screen capture!
Finally, you can, of course, simply include an MS Project plan as an object in PowerPoint though this tends to make the PowerPoint files rather large and unwieldy.
Update 2
Thanks go to @Shivaranjan for the information that, in Project 2010 the camera button is now replaced as 'Copy Picture' as shown in the screenshots in the following links.
First click the copy picture button
and then choose how to export it
Best Answer
copied from a Microsoft Knowledge Base article
Method 3: Scale the Entire Project If you want to scale the entire project (not just the timescale portion as in method 1), scale the entire project to fit the number of pages you want. To do this, follow these steps:
NOTE: When you scale your project for printing, the project information is scaled proportionally for height and width.