I've been a little inactive here recently, but there are two entries from the Presentation Zen blog by Garr Reynolds which are worth a look. First, his gift buying guide has a great list of books for anyone who has to present information to others. I've got a few of the books and have actually read some of them, but should spend some time with a few more of them. Garr also has a list of gadgets you might like.
His entry on Slideshare and the value of uploading PowerPoint slides -- "Sounds promising, but the only problem with this service today is that you can not actually share a presentation. What they mean — and what they should say — is that you can share slides generated in PowerPoint/OpenOffice." This has always been a pet peeve of mine. Uploading your PowerPoint presentation to the web doesn't do much for me if I can't hear your voice and see the actual presentation as it is done. Garr points out that the lack of audio on Slideshare is a problem that might be fixed at some point. He also links to some great examples of doing it the right way, such as the Lessig flash movie and the TED Talks.
His entry on Slideshare and the value of uploading PowerPoint slides -- "Sounds promising, but the only problem with this service today is that you can not actually share a presentation. What they mean — and what they should say — is that you can share slides generated in PowerPoint/OpenOffice." This has always been a pet peeve of mine. Uploading your PowerPoint presentation to the web doesn't do much for me if I can't hear your voice and see the actual presentation as it is done. Garr points out that the lack of audio on Slideshare is a problem that might be fixed at some point. He also links to some great examples of doing it the right way, such as the Lessig flash movie and the TED Talks.
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