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Guy Kawasaki
Tweeting Jerry: Twitter’s Tidbits on Yahoo-er Yang http://truemors.nowpublic.com/...
But will you apply for the job you missed out on? - Rob
Kevin Rose
Reading: Jerry Yang 'stepping down' - http://digg.com/tech_ne...
very Interesting - Brad Wrage
Kevin Rose
Picked this up from you on Twitter and blogged it, meant to give you credit, will go do it now! - Rob
going to favorite it and digg it :) - Zulema ◕ ◡ ◕
and posting to facebook :p - Zulema ◕ ◡ ◕
Robert Scoble
Give PowerPoint Presentations with pptPlex and Impress Audience - http://www.labnol.org/softwar...
On my talk on Friday I told my audience that I would never use Powerpoint again because I had worked at Microsoft. That got a HUGE laugh. And I'm serious. Even with tools that make PowerPoint more useful, like this one, I just hate what it's done for presenters. Most use it badly. The ones who use it well are really great, though. It's just that I've sat through so many bad presentations that I'd rather not encourage anyone. - Robert Scoble
I agree, but I think the problem has more to do with a presenter's inability to understand the theater behind what they're doing. PPT does make people lazy, but I have a feeling even if their design department put together a kick ass Flash animation for it, they'd still end up just reading the bullet points. - Ciaoenrico
So what do you use Robert? - Brad Nickel
Brad: I stand up in front of the audience and talk off of an outline and I demo things when appropriate. If I had to use PowerPoint I'd do it like Larry Lessig does it. Lots of photos, very few words. Tell a story with visuals. - Robert Scoble
I moved to images and one thought per slide about 2 years ago. Works beautifully, but your method reminds me of my debate / extemp days. May have to think about going back there. Why do I need an image for every thought, when I am a persuasive public speaker, eh? Thanks. - Brad Nickel
Seriously. Since when did it become okay or useful to paraphrase what you're going to present and then project it on a screen while you present? My company has an Acceptable Usage policy for the Internet; we need one for PowerPoint. - Tim Harding
Yes, use PP in a manner that it doesn't look like PP. Like Paul Isakson's well-known presentation: http://tinyurl.com/37sbht. - Marko Bon
Look at Steve Jobs presentations. He has everything, including the theater. - Roberto Bonini
@Brad Nickel I like to think of the visuals as emotional buoys. Your speaking is the navigation but the reefs, as well as the moorings, need to be given some prominence. - Christopher Harley
I use Powerpoint to keep the flow of information going and to be sure I don't skip something important. Otherwise I might talk the whole hour and a half - being engaging and entertaining - but neglecting some key points.(I teach branding/marketing workshops for small hair salons) - Aura Mae
slides are *not* a script. if you need reminding about what you planned to say, a: use the presenters notes feature and b: this means you need to rehearse more. if you don't know your material inside and out how can you hope to get your message across to the audience? - h1ro
Yeah. I use SlideRocket now, with one eye-popping image and a few words of text per slide. If I have an important set of data to present, I'll put that on a slide--in a recent presentation on the workflow for my podcast, one slide listed all the software I use. But generally it's just an image and a thought. - Brent Newhall
Wonder how Edward Tufte feels about this update? He was always one to rail on PowerPoint (and especially the presentation style that it fostered.) Does this move presentation style in the right direction, or wrong direction? (I understand it allows you to "drill into" a slide to show information contributing to that slide... which is hard to do ad-hoc with linear slides.) - Wade Dorrell
Presenters notes only work if you are standing at your computer. For a workshop where the presenter is moving about the crowd, they are useless. Moving to the next slide is the cue to move to the next topic. Perhaps a workshop (interacting with the audience) is different than a speech which could be memorized? (I can rehearse my content, but it is hard to rehearse the unexpected input from each audience.) - Aura Mae
I still think LaTeX is the best for presentations: writing one couldn't be quickier, and the result, without being a "show", is accessible, readable, good looking and professional. - Marcos Marado from fftogo
this is like blaming wordpress for sucky blog postings and spam blogs. just because it is the most used software does not make it the reason for sucky presentations. (btw I just ordered the office 2007 although i despise the ribbon and what it does to my productivity. it is just that everything other offering of office software is so not on par with needed features for smart working. then again i am a power user who knows what she is doing.) - Nicole Simon
@aura you can never anticipate every possible audience interaction but depending on the content, you can use questions or interactions in an adaptive manner in order to bring the conversation back to your main talking points. you are on stage - you are in control of the conversation. if you are giving a presentation not a workshop. if it's a workshop style event then the rules change. if it's a presentation, you are there to move the audience to understand what you are trying to share - h1ro
@marcos the tool shouldn't matter - i think that people should practice talking with no props or visual aids at all like @robertscoble was mentioning. if you can't tell a story without a 50ft visual aid you might want to rethink your strategy :) - h1ro
@Nicole it doesn't make PowerPoint the reason for bad presentations, but whether the gravity it exerts as popular software has a bad (or good, or no) effect on presentation as a whole is a debate we can have. - Wade Dorrell
+1 h1ro. amen to that. ppt is a crutch. - .LAG liked that
I agree. I enjoy using PowerPoint for instructional pres but I never use it alone, its usually in connection with Camtasia or Impatica. But I've noticed that I will hear people say "O, yeah, I can do PowerPoint" and then you do see what they mean: It's every thing that Edward Tufte warns against and more. It just seems to me that they are not enjoying what you can do with the tool. They don't even explore it. And yes, most importantly you have to have a story to tell. You've got to storyboard. - Melanie Reed
Robert's talk at the New Media Expo was far more engaging because he *didn't* use PPT. - Chris Luckhardt
@Chris Luckhardt ...because Robert didn't use any presentation software at all, or because he did use software but it wasn't PPT? - Wade Dorrell
Wade: I didn't use any presentation software at all. Right. - Robert Scoble
@Robert Unclear whether the "Right" was sarcasm or affirmation. Thanks for the reply. Anyway, do you use any kind of resource to share data spoken & unspoken? (For example, do you have a person post to FF the data/URLs during a presentation? Do you do premeditated handouts of some of the data/URLs you think you'll mention?) Certainly someone in the audience can capture this for you, if... more... - Wade Dorrell
but it is a MS only solution and not applicable for Mac Office 2008 :-( - Torsten Eckert
Mitchell Tsai
Ansel Adams - Tribute page by Carletto di San Giovanni [MySpace] - http://profile.myspace.com/index...
Ansel Adams - Tribute page by Carletto di San Giovanni [MySpace]
Ansel Adams - Tribute page by Carletto di San Giovanni [MySpace]
Ansel Adams - Tribute page by Carletto di San Giovanni [MySpace]
Adams was born in San Francisco, California in an upper-class family to Charles and Olive Adams. When he was four years old, he was tossed face-first into a garden wall in an aftershock from the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, breaking his nose. - Mitchell Tsai from Bookmarklet
Adams' father decided to pull Ansel out of school in 1915, at the age of 12. He was to be educated by private tutors and, with this, his father also arranged for him to take piano lessons and to learn Greek. From years of music his original passion was to become a concert pianist, but Adams became interested in photography after seeing Paul Strand's negatives. Adams long alternated between a career as a concert pianist and one as a photographer. - Mitchell Tsai
Ansel Adams first came to Yosemite National Park in 1916. - Mitchell Tsai
Adams was an avid mountaineer in his youth and participated in the club's annual "high trips", and was later responsible for several first ascents in the Sierra Nevada. It was at Half Dome in 1927 that he first found that he could make photographs that were, in his own words, "…an austere and blazing poetry of the real". - Mitchell Tsai
One of my favorite interviews was with Ansel's son, here: http://www.fastcompany.tv/video... -- did you know that the music on that video is actually Ansel Adams' piano playing? We have one of the few recordings of his music, thanks to his family. - Robert Scoble
Robert: I watched that video when you first posted it. Great interview and I do look forward to seeing more from the PhotoCycle series. - Justin Korn
Robert: I like that FastComany's videos don't auto-play. I can open the video in a tab & listen to it when I have time. Fun to see Yosemite's Glacier Point again after 2 visits to Yosemite this summer. :-) - Mitchell Tsai
@Mitchell Totally agree, it's little things like that I like on the web. Can't stand autoplay vids! - Mo Kargas
Justin: the PhotoCycle series got a funding green light (thanks to a sponsorship from Adobe) and we'll be starting that up probably in October. Got some really fun ones planned for that. In the meantime, though, we just interviewed Rick Smolan, photographer behind the Day in the Life series of photo books. That should be out later this week or next week and is a good one. - Robert Scoble
Favourite image - Oak Tree, Snowstorm - http://www.findlikeminds.com/Rob... - Rob
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