This link has been bookmarked by 23 people . It was first bookmarked on 14 Jul 2008, by Mathieu Plourde.
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27 Sep 11
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03 Mar 10
Christina DiMicelliIs the internet going to absorb our brains into a private world of websites and online video (not to mention must-read blogs like this one)? Or is there still hope for public, shared communication - even in the real world?
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05 Nov 09
Michele DayAt a time in history when Powerpoint is both ubiquitous and widely despised, when students in classrooms pay increasingly little attention to the education they're paying for because ...
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26 Mar 09
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21 Sep 08
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23 Aug 08
Kristina Hoeppnerinteresting ways to create and present a presentation, e.g. Presentation Tennis and PowerPoint Karaoke
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13 Aug 08
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31 Jul 08
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26 Jul 08
Michel BauwensIs the internet going to absorb our brains into a private world of websites and online video (not to mention must-read blogs like this one)? Or is there still hope for public, shared communication - even in the real world?
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25 Jul 08
Howard RheingoldThe same people building the attention-absorbing internet are experimenting with new methods to make public communication engaging again. Below are some of our favorite ways it's happening.
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At a time in history when Powerpoint is both ubiquitous and widely despised, when students in classrooms pay increasingly little attention to the education they're paying for because Facebook is more interesting - is there no hope for public communication any more?
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. "Like one of those collaboratively written stories," the company writes, "each slide is created by a different person and added to the master slideshow at the end of each day for the next two weeks. And so in the end, we hope to come up with this really awesome presentation that has been collaboratively built up from scratch by our users."
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Pecha Kucha are and Ignite are two different public presentation formats focused on speeding things up. Presenters at both types of events have a limited number of slides they can show and each slide is limited to 15 or 20 seconds on screen before automatically advancing. It's challenging and can be very entertaining.
According to Wikipedia, the history of Pecha Kucha is as follows:
"It was originally devised by Astrid Klein and Mark Dytham of Klein-Dytham Architecture (KDa) in Tokyo in 2003 as a place for young designers to meet, network, and show their work in public. The format has spread virally to many cities across the world. The name derives from a Japanese term for the sound of conversation ("chit-chat")."
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24 Jul 08
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14 Jul 08
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Mathieu PlourdeThe same people building the attention-absorbing internet are experimenting with new methods to make public communication engaging again.
presentation Ignite PresentationKaraoke Funny PechaKucha slideshare
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