Enlarge (credit: Google)

Google Slides, Google’s PowerPoint competitor, is getting a fun new collaborative feature: live mouse pointers. When multiple people are editing a presentation, they’ll be able to see everyone else’s mouse cursor, as if they’ve suddenly booted up a remote desktop instance.
Google Docs and Sheets have long had multiple typing indicators for each person, representing what sentence or cell they’re working on. That sort of thing doesn’t work well for presentations, though, which often involve images and rearranging things on a free-form layout. Slides will now offer live remote mouse pointers from other people participating in an edit, which will smoothly move around the screen just like a real mouse. This doesn’t seem particularly useful without some other form of communication, but if you’re on a voice or video call, the live cursor could let you easily point to things while you explain them.
Google Slides with

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