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71 Articles match "PowerPoint","Software"
The Latest from the Speaking Pro Central Community
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Friday, March 19, 2010
Here is an article about a conference that has decided to ban PowerPoint presentations: [link] . The writer explains that by banning PowerPoint, it will solve the problem of poor presentations. That’s just like banning word processing software and making everyone go back to using pen and paper. Why the ban? Instead, the presenters will use flipcharts and whiteboards to help the audience understand their presentation.
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Friday, February 5, 2010
Too often, presenters rely solely on their software to provide every bit of their presentation’s creativity. The problem with this approach is that the entertainment value of PowerPoint and other programs, leaves a lot to be desired.
Tags: PowerPoint audiovisual public speaking visual aids presentation People are tired of worn-out power point presentations!
Does this mean we should jettison the technology and go back to the “stone age”, as one person put it, in giving our presentations?
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Monday, February 1, 2010
While writing the next book, I’ve been in speech analysis-mode, and have considered including an analysis on this speech as an example of what not to do… but I love PowerPoint too much to do that.
And it really came about from an intense collaboration between our own engineering organization and our partners, a group of about 50,000 partners, software vendors, hardware vendors, peripheral vendors, and our customers. Matt Lauer said that the launch of Windows 7 was the most important launch Microsoft had done in ten years. If that’s true, why’d it suck so much?
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The Best from the Speaking Pro Central Community
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Friday, January 8, 2010
When if comes to software, bells and whistles are great! Working in PowerPoint every day, we’ve learned a few tricks. So when Microsoft asked us to use latest version of PowerPoint to create a cinematic presentation , we couldn’t wait to show off our skills.
(Our We used PowerPoint 2010–and only PowerPoint 2010–to create a short trailer sharing “5 If you don’t know how to use them. Our excitement, Exhibit A: [link] )
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Monday, July 20, 2009
It is often useful for marketers and presenters to show a web page or some other visual representation in their PowerPoint slide show, training manual, white paper, etc. 0160; I use Techsmith's SnagIt, but there are also various other software packages and online services that you might consider for this task. Update LifeHacker has reviews of two other free Windows compatible 0160; One tool that helps facilitat e this is a screen capture program. 0160; Most of these tools allow you to capture an image; edit, enhance, annotate or modify the
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Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Research carried out by Stephen Mahar, Ulku Yaylacicegi and Thomas Janicki found that students who were shown an animated PowerPoint slideshow learnt less than those that saw a non-animated slideshow.
When I first read of the research on Science Daily Could PowerPoint presentations be stifling learning? The PowerPoint custom animation they used
I thought that simple, non-distracting animations that brought in slide elements one at a time as I verbally introduced them was helpful. I
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Thursday, January 29, 2009
Using social media tools like Twitter , you can play a game of "Logical Fallacy Bingo" as you watch slick presenters play fast and loose with the rules of logic. Here's how to play: Just for grins, let's cover some examples of logical fallacies that we often hear about PowerPoint -- the tool many love to hate. Therefore, presenters should use PowerPoint slides as teleprompters during live-audience presentations. " photo credit: brew ha ha This argument, of course, is the fallacy of "False Analogy". Use emotion to connect to your audience. It's
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Monday, December 21, 2009
The PowerPoint Revolution continues! don’t believe that there is anything inherently wrong with PowerPoint, but it has undoubtedly become the software program everyone loves to hate.
For instance, American-born statistician and Yale Professor Edward Tufte wrote a popular essay denouncing PowerPoint’s ability to provide quality analytics. Every few months another contender appears in the marketplace, attempting to poke a hole in the thick skin of the 800 lb slideware-gorilla that dominates meeting rooms across the globe. I
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Tuesday, August 25, 2009
During the last month I have seen some seriously challenged PowerPoint Slide decks. But I’ve recently noticed there are still pockets of stubborn “old school” PowerPoint users who simply refuse to change. Most people know what a poorly constructed and staged PowerPoint presentation can be. Part 1: The Seven Deadly Sins
For a while there things were looking up in Silicon Valley; people were using more pictures, less text, more color, and congruent graphs.
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Monday, November 30, 2009
How about inside PowerPoint?
Microsoft wanted those who use PowerPoint to have on-hand access to world-class presentation training within their software (yay!) and asked us if we would mind sharing some of our tips in the next release of their presentation software, Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 .
We Embedded within PowerPoint 2010 you Let’s arrange a meet up. Yep, it’s true.
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Monday, June 1, 2009
But if you want even more flexibility to write from other places in the room, or to let your audience write on the screen, try Papershow , a more portable solution that works around the shortcomings of white boards and it works with imported PowerPoint presentations.
Once done, the software is ready to go to work as a white board or a presentation. If you don’t have a Tablet PC to write directly on your slides during a BBP presentation, you can always use a whiteboard as a companion to your screen. What Comes in the Package
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Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Since a presentation can exist without visuals, utilizing visuals (like PowerPoint slides) to serve as a visual backdrop will enhance your presentation. A knowledgeable presenter understands that they aren't a complement to their slides. So many presenters look at PowerPoint and Keynote and see a "presentation." As a society In the past few weeks I've been sitting in on a number of presentations. While we continue to try and improve the quality and effectiveness of presentations worldwide (go big or go home, right?),
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Saturday, May 16, 2009
That was probably what the creators of PowerPoint had in mind rather than the bevy of bullet point, text-heavy monster presentations it has unleashed upon the world.
For example, this is true of software, which may be incredibly complex behind the scenes. But for the developers, the real challenge is making that software easy to use for unsophisticated customers.
Dan Roam in “The Back of the Napkin’ makes a convincing case for a simpler and better approach to communicating based on visual thinking.
There’s a reason that school rooms and conference rooms have
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