A decent solution may be to use the SlideShow program from Kid Pix. You'll need either Kid Pix 2 or Kid Pix Companion. I'm not sure if the program itself can run on a 1MB machine so your best bet is to produce the slide show on a compact with more RAM or on a Mac using a 12" monitor (the kind that was bundled with most early LCs), as it produces slide shows with the same resolution as the compact screen. Make sure you edit the pictures so that they are in monochrome. (If you've got color images you can always dither them using a more powerful graphics program before pasting them into Kid Pix; SlideShow generally prefers Kid Pix format since the size is right although you could use any program capable of saving the same size in PICT format if you really want to). Set the time slider to the lowest setting. Save your file as a stand alone slide show. This creates an application that can be opened on any computer and played. It's not QuickTime quality but for a 1MB compact Mac it looks pretty good. You can even add sound and transitions with this program.
Stick with the older floppy-based Kid Pix programs. Kid Pix Studio (the CD release) and newer need a 640 x 480 screen to run so I'd assume the slide shows they create would also need that minimum requirement. Keep in mind that the standard Kid Pix package does not include this program; you'll need the Companion add-on or Kid Pix 2 (which bundled Kid Pix and the Companion in one package as a solution for users of of computers that couldn't run Studio; it especially seemed to go over well with schools who had labs full of 12" monitors). Neither are all that common on eBay but now and then they do show up.
Stick with the older floppy-based Kid Pix programs. Kid Pix Studio (the CD release) and newer need a 640 x 480 screen to run so I'd assume the slide shows they create would also need that minimum requirement. Keep in mind that the standard Kid Pix package does not include this program; you'll need the Companion add-on or Kid Pix 2 (which bundled Kid Pix and the Companion in one package as a solution for users of of computers that couldn't run Studio; it especially seemed to go over well with schools who had labs full of 12" monitors). Neither are all that common on eBay but now and then they do show up.



