|
•
Friday, November 6, 2009
p212: On October 16, 2003, Jobs had finished the discussion of a new music alliance with AOL and an explanation of the new iTunes features. Source: Business Week
I l-o-v-e-d this book. It’s officially in my Top 5 favorite presentation books.
|
|
•
Saturday, October 3, 2009
Unfortunately, you can’t do that in PowerPoint 2003 because it does not have the feature of converting a shape to points. So I started playing with the tools that PowerPoint 2003 does have to see if I could achieve the same result. I was inspired by this blog post on using PowerPoint as a photo editor instead of Photoshop. The demo is shown in PowerPoint 2007 and the one aspect of the instructions that I was intrigued about was when he showed how to convert a rectangle to a set of points and then curve the sides.
|
|
•
Thursday, December 24, 2009
But the inserted PPT 2003 tables do not have these options active.
Select the (PPT 2003) table, activate these options and the 2 tables can easily be updated to look identical for a consistent presentation.
- Working from this slide the goal is to give both an identical look/style (file can be downloaded from previous post).
The template has a few options for tables preset that the imported tables to not automatically have turned on.
|
|
•
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
One question I am struggling with is whether to load the 2007 or the 2003 version as my primary Office version. I am currently running Office 2003 as my primary version. Because my surveys show that most corporate clients are running Office 2003 and a number are running even earlier versions, like 2000. I am planning to buy a new laptop next year after the new Core i7 chipset comes to laptops. I
|
|
•
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
the PPT 2003 table.
Here is a problem. You have a presentation where a number of tables are created and the Table Styles (Table Tools >> Design >> Table Styles) are used to make them look consistent and professional.
I often hear (and was one of people complaining too) that the styles are different
|
|
•
Thursday, July 9, 2009
0160; My 2003 Ford Escort had been stolen so I was walking and taking the bus. For two weeks I had been an Accidental Green. 0160; I was getting to like it. 0160; No worries about my car being stolen, since that had already happened.
|
|
•
Sunday, August 16, 2009
The Toastmasters World Champion of Public Speaking for 2009 is Australian Mark Hunter, with his speech “A sink for a green tomato”. In seems that previously, Mark competed in the 2001 World Championships which has since produced 2003 winner Jim Key. For a great personal account of the 2009 contest check out Jim Key’s blog post on The Adventures of Jim .
...Tags: Beyond the accolades, having previously competed in the early rounds of the contest myself the contest is a good way to expand and improve your skills on the area of public speaking.
|
|
•
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
For Powerpoint 2003:
[link]
For After giving a talk last night in which I used a lot of images and very little text, one of the participants emailed me with the following question:
“Dear Gavin,
I I attended you very helpful presentation at the Basingstoke Country Park Hotel yesterday.
|
|
•
Friday, May 1, 2009
World Champion of Public Speaking : In 2003, Jim won the title of world champion of public speaking. Online University Reviews Search top online university reviews, ratings and rankings of accredited top online universities to find the best online university for you. Online University Degree Finder University Reviews American Intercontinental University reviews American University reviews Argosy University reviews Ashland University reviews Ashworth University reviews Aspen University reviews Bellevue University reviews Boston University reviews Capella University reviews Colorado Technical University reviews Cornell
|
|
•
Saturday, December 5, 2009
0160; Way back in 2003, management expert Tom Peters screamed in his book "Re-imagine!" Few could take it in. 0160; But it was out there: The warning that those well-paying corporate jobs were disappearing. quot; that "White-collar employment as we've known it is dead."
|