Why Google Slides can't host your AI-generated HTML deck (and what can)
Your agent wrote HTML. Google Slides can't open HTML. So you rebuild it by hand.
Google Slides is a hand-authoring editor — it does not render the HTML your agent produced, so the only way in is to recreate the deck slide by slide. Slideless hosts that HTML exactly as it is: live in the browser, public, and tracked, in one command.
Good at
- Hand-authoring slides in a familiar editor
- Real-time co-editing of simple slides with a team
- People who think in slides, not HTML
Not for
- Hosting HTML an AI agent generated
- Preserving web interactivity — animations, 3D, video, custom JS
- Frictionless public links with no account wall
- Hosts the actual HTML your agent made — nothing to rebuild
- Keeps every bit of web interactivity alive
- Public link anyone opens; no Google account, no SSO wall
- Pushed by the agent, tracked per recipient
If you're building slides by hand and your team co-edits them in Google's editor, Slides is great at that. If an AI agent already produced the deck as HTML, Slides makes you throw that work away and start over.
Can I import HTML into Google Slides?
Not in a way that preserves the deck — Slides is not an HTML renderer, so you end up rebuilding it manually. Slideless serves the HTML directly, so the deck looks and behaves exactly as the agent built it.
Do viewers need a Google account?
Not with Slideless. The link is public and opens in any browser, no account required.
Your agent made the deck.
Slideless gives it a link.
Share your first deck in seconds · Free tier · No credit card