Why convert AAC narration to MP4 before inserting it into decks?
Slide apps whitelist MP4 media slots while raw AAC attachments confuse Windows laptops, mail scanners, and conference AV desks that refuse odd MIME types. Conference rooms still run mixed macOS and Windows builds, so baseline H.264 still frames plus AAC-LC audio are the boring insurance policy. Searchers type aac to mp4 keynote, powerpoint insert audio mp4, pitch deck narration mp4, and windows black screen mp4 audio because the failure mode is decoder policy, not storytelling talent. Hotel WiFi rehearsals still need local copies—do not rely on cloud-only links minutes before the keynote. Sensitive revenue talk inside the VO still needs redaction even after you wrap it in a shiny MP4 icon. Pure black frames can trigger projector eco blanking that looks like a freeze—use near-black branded fields when needed. Ai2Done keeps the presentation variant practical: Movies & TV smoke test, slide show rehearsal, redundant USB copies, and checksum-linked AAC masters in the run-of-show binder.
How to embed AAC-backed MP4 narration that survives review laptops
- Open AAC to MP4, pick the presentations variant, align still-frame aspect ratio with the slide master, and read attachment size caps for email handoffs.
- Export a baseline SDR sample, open it outside slide show mode on Windows, embed it, then page through transitions while listening for dropouts or latency.
- Rehearse on the venue projector with Bluetooth audio paths, log any buzz, and store reciprocal hashes tying AAC sources to the MP4 shown on stage.