Comment by D9u
13 years ago
75 slides to convey an impression which could have been spelled out in a paragraph or two...
Anyone with a slow connection knows what I'm upset about.
Needless to say, I quit when I was about 24 slides into the presentation.
Here's a transcript for you! (Made with Emacs, appropriately).
Sorry to disagree, but
1. The transcript of the entire slideshare presentation is below the slide. This is the case for every presentation on Slideshare and you can skim that if you are in a hurry.
2. I dislike content-stuffed powerpoint slides like most viewers would. It is usually recommended to keep the text per slide at a minimum even if the content needs to be spread across many slides.
>>It is usually recommended to keep the text per slide at a minimum
The point is, slides are teaching and not information recording/storing tools.
Most people forget this plain simple fact.
First principle of giving a presentation, ensure people focus on what you say and not on your slides.
Well, then he made the right choice, because he turned his presentation into a summarised subtitle of the story he was telling.
You're totally right, the transcript is quite readable 1/1 Powered by Rabbit 0.9.2
It seemed like a weird way to convey the content, but I found myself getting into it after a few slides, in a Zen sort of way :)
The author is Japanese, after all.
Of course, I've been a constant Emacs user since about 1990, so maybe I'm cutting him some extra slack. I love Emacs. It is so powerful and I feel that even after 23 years of daily use I'm still only touching the surface of what it can do.
In some ways Emacs has fallen behind the state-of-the-art, but the community is so vast and talented that they keep coming up with awesome add-ins to keep it competitive (thanks, guys!).
I too found the presentation much more interesting. The pauses in between each break/slide just gave me time to take in the significance. I think it was very appropriate here, and I'm glad I was introduced to this method of presentation. I think I'll use it myself some time.
It looks like the style is inspired by Takahashi Method: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takahashi_method
Though, he departs from it; with pictures and such.
would have rather read this presentation in Emacs in 1 paragraph than 75 slides.