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Content Tagged with Presentations + powerpoint

Rapidly Spread Web Presentations and Reach to Thousands of Prospective Customers

Is your sales force spread too thin and you can’t reach hundreds of prospective customers because your sales force can only make a limited number of formal presentations each week and the cost of visiting those customers exceeds your travel budget? What if every sales person in your organization could reach out to ten (10) [...]

User:WPeterson: eLearning Space of Spirits - Best Practices for Online Learning & Training World

Wondershare PPT2Flash Professional is Upgraded to V5.0!

May 30th, PPT2Flash Professional is upgraded to Version 5.0.0 with two new template players and enhanced PowerPoint to Flash conversion on text, images and SmartArt. Learn more about these new features>> What’s New of PPT2Flash Professional 5.0: 1. Significantly enhanced the conversion quality of text, images and SmartArt. 2. Optimized the user interface, and make the features easy [...]

User:WPeterson: eLearning Space of Spirits - Best Practices for Online Learning & Training World

Slide shows based on HTML, CSS, & JavaScript

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PowerPoint pretty much sucks, for a variety of reasons. And in that group I also include OpenOffice.org Impress (which I personally choose to suffer through) and Apple's Keynote. They all just suck in different ways. Being a Web dude, I've always looked for a web-based solution, and now there appears to be two contenders: Dave Raggett's Slidy (he's the guy who invented the awesome Tidy, so you know he's a smart cookie) and Eric Meyer's (we all must bow to him & his CSS godly knowledge) S5, which stands for Simple Standards-Based Slide Show System.

Both are good, & both work the same: they provide you with the CSS files (which you can customize ... & which you should customize, so your templates are unique) and JavaScript, & your job is put your entire presentation in an XHTML file. If you know HTML, this will be easy; if you don't ... well, there's always Impress! Based on my experimentation with both, I'm going to use S5. It supports font scaling a bit better, & it has some features that Slidy doesn't have, especially in the footer that's auto-generated on every slide. On top of that, Eric Meyer, showing his background as a writer, has better documentation that Dave Raggett, which is key. But in either case, both Slidy & S5 are worth exploring, & it's great news that we finally have an alternative to PowerPoint and the other presentation clients.

(Check out all of our posts on presentations, OpenOffice.org, S5, and Eric Meyer.)

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opensource: The Open Source Weblog

SlideShare

SlideShare is a cool place to host and share presentations. Upload all your slide decks, and find / download interesting presentations.

podcasting: del.icio.us tag/podcasting

Slideshare, now Slidecasts, with Sound! » CogDogBlog

Slideshare, now Slidecasts, with Sound! July 24th, 2007 I’ve been fond of Slideshare for months, and have been meeting to blog about how they’ve quielty rolled in social networking features, but their newly announced feature today of providing the abi

podcasting: del.icio.us tag/podcasting

KeyJnote

Creates a presentation from a PDF

opensource: del.icio.us tag/opensource

Powerpoint Presentation Humor

<object height="330" width="400"><embed src="http://lads.myspace.com/videos/vplayer.swf" height="330" width="400"></embed></object>

Don McMillan via Information Ashtetics

Typo: Encytemedia

Slide shows based on HTML, CSS, & JavaScript

Filed under: , , , , , ,

PowerPoint pretty much sucks, for a variety of reasons. And in that group I also include OpenOffice.org Impress (which I personally choose to suffer through) and Apple's Keynote. They all just suck in different ways. Being a Web dude, I've always looked for a web-based solution, and now there appears to be two contenders: Dave Raggett's Slidy (he's the guy who invented the awesome Tidy, so you know he's a smart cookie) and Eric Meyer's (we all must bow to him & his CSS godly knowledge) S5, which stands for Simple Standards-Based Slide Show System.

Both are good, & both work the same: they provide you with the CSS files (which you can customize ... & which you should customize, so your templates are unique) and JavaScript, & your job is put your entire presentation in an XHTML file. If you know HTML, this will be easy; if you don't ... well, there's always Impress! Based on my experimentation with both, I'm going to use S5. It supports font scaling a bit better, & it has some features that Slidy doesn't have, especially in the footer that's auto-generated on every slide. On top of that, Eric Meyer, showing his background as a writer, has better documentation that Dave Raggett, which is key. But in either case, both Slidy & S5 are worth exploring, & it's great news that we finally have an alternative to PowerPoint and the other presentation clients.

(Check out all of our posts on presentations, OpenOffice.org, S5, and Eric Meyer.)

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

opensource: The Open Source Weblog

ProfCast - ProfCast

ProfCast is a versatile, powerful, yet very simple to use tool for recording lectures including PowerPoint and/or Keynote slides for creating enhanced podcasts. ProfCast provides a low cost solution for recording and distributing lectures, speci

podcasting: del.icio.us tag/podcasting

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