The document discusses best practices and challenges for using PowerPoint presentations on television. It provides guidance on font sizes, colors, text formatting, and slide layouts that are most effective for television. Key recommendations include using large font sizes of at least 18 points, limiting the amount of text per slide, spreading content over multiple slides, and staying within the "TV safe area" to avoid clipping of content at the edges of screens. Blocks of long paragraphs of text are discouraged as difficult to read when presented on television.
Preparing Your Slide: Driven by DesignYi-Hung Peng
The document discusses best practices for preparing effective presentations slides. It provides guidelines on using visual focus to eliminate unnecessary elements, employing visual impact with large fonts and images, and maintaining visual flow between slides. The document also stresses considering the audience's feelings by using concepts, comparisons, descriptions or inspiring messages tailored to their needs. Overall it emphasizes following design principles of focus, impact, and flow while accounting for the audience to create engaging slide presentations.
The document discusses the power of storytelling and anecdotes when presenting information. It quotes Ira Glass saying that even boring material feels suspenseful and engaging when presented in story form as a sequence of events. The document also advocates finding the "nugget" or key point and using powerful images when presenting, rather than relying on slides filled with text.
This document provides tips for creating effective PowerPoint slides and avoiding common pitfalls. It addresses topics like outlines, slide structure, fonts, color, backgrounds, graphs, spelling and grammar. For slide structure, it recommends using 1-2 slides per minute, writing in point form with 4-5 points per slide, and showing one point at a time. For fonts, it suggests using at least 18-point font in a standard font like Times New Roman. For color, it advises using font colors that contrast the background and only occasionally using color for emphasis. It also gives tips for using simple, consistent backgrounds and well-designed graphs with titles. The document stresses proofreading for spelling and grammar errors.
Creating effective slides requires careful consideration. Templates should generally be avoided as they often lack visual impact and personality. Instead, focus on simplicity, clarity of message, and aesthetics tailored to your specific needs and audience.
The document provides tips for creating effective PowerPoint slides, including using outlines to structure the presentation, keeping slides concise with point form bullet points, choosing easily readable fonts and backgrounds, designing clear graphs and charts, and proofreading for spelling and grammar errors. The last few slides discuss ending with an impactful conclusion that summarizes key points and inviting questions from the audience.
The document provides 10 tips for improving PowerPoint presentations. It recommends using high contrast text that is easy to read from a distance rather than small bullet points. Slides should have consistent formatting and content across slides for continuity. Visual variety can be added through charts instead of tables and images while keeping the style clean and readable. Maintaining eye contact with the audience rather than the screen helps engage them.
The US Federal Government is using Internet business processes to improve Facility Management of 3.35 billion square feet of space. Big Data by definition.
Check it out, Mike B
Preparing Your Slide: Driven by DesignYi-Hung Peng
The document discusses best practices for preparing effective presentations slides. It provides guidelines on using visual focus to eliminate unnecessary elements, employing visual impact with large fonts and images, and maintaining visual flow between slides. The document also stresses considering the audience's feelings by using concepts, comparisons, descriptions or inspiring messages tailored to their needs. Overall it emphasizes following design principles of focus, impact, and flow while accounting for the audience to create engaging slide presentations.
The document discusses the power of storytelling and anecdotes when presenting information. It quotes Ira Glass saying that even boring material feels suspenseful and engaging when presented in story form as a sequence of events. The document also advocates finding the "nugget" or key point and using powerful images when presenting, rather than relying on slides filled with text.
This document provides tips for creating effective PowerPoint slides and avoiding common pitfalls. It addresses topics like outlines, slide structure, fonts, color, backgrounds, graphs, spelling and grammar. For slide structure, it recommends using 1-2 slides per minute, writing in point form with 4-5 points per slide, and showing one point at a time. For fonts, it suggests using at least 18-point font in a standard font like Times New Roman. For color, it advises using font colors that contrast the background and only occasionally using color for emphasis. It also gives tips for using simple, consistent backgrounds and well-designed graphs with titles. The document stresses proofreading for spelling and grammar errors.
Creating effective slides requires careful consideration. Templates should generally be avoided as they often lack visual impact and personality. Instead, focus on simplicity, clarity of message, and aesthetics tailored to your specific needs and audience.
The document provides tips for creating effective PowerPoint slides, including using outlines to structure the presentation, keeping slides concise with point form bullet points, choosing easily readable fonts and backgrounds, designing clear graphs and charts, and proofreading for spelling and grammar errors. The last few slides discuss ending with an impactful conclusion that summarizes key points and inviting questions from the audience.
The document provides 10 tips for improving PowerPoint presentations. It recommends using high contrast text that is easy to read from a distance rather than small bullet points. Slides should have consistent formatting and content across slides for continuity. Visual variety can be added through charts instead of tables and images while keeping the style clean and readable. Maintaining eye contact with the audience rather than the screen helps engage them.
The US Federal Government is using Internet business processes to improve Facility Management of 3.35 billion square feet of space. Big Data by definition.
Check it out, Mike B
This document provides 8 tips for creating a great slide presentation including ensuring good color contrast between the background and text, adding your logo to the master page to build brand awareness, using a sans serif font and limiting animations and bullets to one level for simplicity. It also recommends adding relevant diagrams and high resolution images, making slides printable, and maintaining a consistent style while avoiding standard templates.
This document provides an executive summary and overview of the integrated facilities management industry. It discusses the global market size and growth rate, top global service providers in the industry, levels of market maturity in different regions, average contract periods, key negotiation factors, and impactful cost components. The supply and cost structures are analyzed, along with sourcing models, pricing approaches, and best practices. Regional differences and emerging engagement strategies are also reviewed at a high level.
Tutorial how to use a picture as a presentation slide backgroundFreelance
http://www.carlkwan.com As promised, here's the tutorial on using a picture as a PowerPoint background. This also works for anyone like me who uses Apple's Keynote.
Why should you do this?
Well, if your slides stand out from normal presentation slides, your presentation will stick better in the audience's mind.
In the slides, you'll see the following...
1. Slides from a real presentation that I fixed and added pictures for the backgrounds.
2. You'll see the Before, then I’ll show you how to get from the Before to the After.
The steps I took can be done in PowerPoint or Keynote. The slides in the example presentation were all made in PowerPoint for Mac. Don't worry, as pretty much everything in the PC version of PowerPoint does the same thing.
So here are the six steps I took:
1. Alignment is a fast way to make a presentation more professional looking; use a left-align as your default to avoid design faults.
2. Use pictures that are relevant to your topic; make sure the picture size is the same or bigger than your slide size.
3. If a picture doesn’t have good colours, change it to black and white.
4. Make your titles bigger to create contrast and to help the audience see better.
5. Don't trap text in a bordered text box... Set it free!
6. Use a black box set at 75% transparency to use as a background for your text.
This document provides tips for creating effective PowerPoint slides, including outlines, structure, fonts, color, backgrounds, graphs, images, conclusions, and questions. Key recommendations are to use outlines and point form, limit text per slide, use large readable fonts, choose high-contrast font colors, keep backgrounds simple and consistent, include titles on graphs, and end with a conclusion slide summarizing the main points and inviting questions. The document cautions against overly long paragraphs of text, small fonts, distracting colors and backgrounds, and images without relevance to the topic.
To make a good presentation, keep it simple with a large font size and use color to emphasize key points. Practice your presentation and be prepared to skip unnecessary slides if you run out of time. Visuals like pictures are more effective than just words, so include images when possible.
This document discusses air sports tourism opportunities in Turkey, including paragliding, hot air ballooning, skydiving, and ultralight aviation. It lists popular locations for these activities, such as Ölüdeniz for paragliding, Cappadocia for hot air ballooning due to its unique landscape, and drop zones in Ankara, İnönü, and Efes for skydiving. Turkey has good conditions for air sports and offers visitors chances to experience activities like paragliding tandem flights and hot air balloon rides that provide scenic views of the country.
The document provides tips on how to create an effective PowerPoint presentation. It notes that the goal of most presenters is to do a good PowerPoint presentation, as a good presentation determines audience response. It recommends giving thought to the information and audience benefits before starting, making a draft of slide styles, presenting information logically from left to right in a sequence, using titles that are easily readable, ensuring font and background color contrast, limiting the number of slides but covering all points, utilizing graphics to replace text on some slides, applying limited animation to grab attention without distraction, reviewing for errors, and getting feedback from others.
The document provides dos and don'ts for presentations. It recommends arriving early and using few slides to emphasize key ideas. Presenters should state their point with interesting material using visuals like pictures, graphs and quotes where needed. They should maintain composure, make eye contact, speak loudly and use quotes to engage audiences. Presentations should have introductions and be timed correctly with good body language. Things to avoid include starting without an intro, using too many slides or small fonts, reading slides verbatim and using unnecessary gestures. Presentations also shouldn't use too much jargon, charts or drone on longly.
What is PowerPoint? What kind of work is usually done in PowerPoint? What is Slide? How to create a new Slide? What is Animation? How much is usually kind of Animation? What is Transition?
The document provides dos and don'ts for creating effective PowerPoint presentations:
1. Do organize thoughts before starting, use outlines, spell check content, and limit text on slides.
2. Don't work on visuals before text, use too many graphics, or read slides directly.
3. Tips include using keywords, consistent formatting, high contrast colors, proper spacing and alignment, and practicing presentations.
5 teknik pembukaan presentasi by mustofa thovids (slide presentation expert)Mustofa Thovids
Dokumen tersebut memberikan saran tentang teknik pembukaan presentasi yang efektif dalam 5 menit pertama untuk membuat kesan yang kuat. Beberapa teknik yang disarankan adalah memilih salah satu atau menggabungkan teknik seperti cerita pengantar, pertanyaan, pernyataan menarik, statistik mengejutkan, atau citra yang menarik perhatian.
Like double edged swords, blind dates, and nuclear power plants, either a PowerPoint presentation can go really well and make you look totally awesome or it can completely suck and be the scourge of your existence. If you’re a savvy panda you’re no doubt aware that there are certain flaws in presentation design which can wreck an otherwise perfectly good slide presentation.
In case you’re well-versed in the do’s of presentation design but need some reinforcement about the don’ts to make sure you don’t screw up an otherwise perfect presentation, here are FIVE PRESENTATION DESIGN TIPS to remember the next time you create a presentation.
Diagram Mistakes in Presentation Slide DesignPeter Zvirinsky
The document discusses three common mistakes to avoid when designing diagrams for presentations: (1) including too much information on a slide and lacking white space, (2) having an unreadable and chaotic layout with incorrect shapes alignment, and (3) lacking consistency in graphical styles, fonts, and elements. It provides examples of poor diagrams that demonstrate these mistakes and improved diagrams that have more white space, aligned shapes, and consistent formatting. The key to creating readable professional diagrams is to follow these three simple design tricks: having white space, aligned shapes, and consistent graphical style and font use.
This PowerPoint presentation provides dos and don'ts for creating effective presentations. It recommends using easy-to-read sans-serif fonts like Arial or Century Gothic. Slides should not be overloaded with too much text or complex backgrounds as that makes them difficult to read. Key guidelines include using fonts larger than 24 points, limiting text to 7 words per line, and practicing presentations from a distance to ensure readability. Sources should be properly credited.
This powerpoint presentation defines entrepreneurship and discusses its history and modern applications. It begins by defining an entrepreneur as someone who organizes and manages a business while taking on financial risk. It notes that agricultural students have been involved in entrepreneurship since the early 20th century through programs like raising livestock and growing crops. Today, agricultural entrepreneurship can involve many diverse activities beyond farming like custom harvesting or operating a small engine repair service. The presentation concludes by discussing characteristics of successful entrepreneurs and different types like social and lifestyle entrepreneurs.
The document provides examples of standard, boring presentation templates and encourages the creation of unique, visually appealing templates instead. It emphasizes using fewer words and more images per slide, varying fonts and colors, and breaking content into multiple slides to keep audiences engaged. Inspiration sources like design blogs and galleries of infographics and slide designs are recommended for making impactful presentations that attract and impress audiences.
This document provides tips and examples for proofreading documents to catch mistakes. It discusses the difference between editing and proofreading and emphasizes closely examining all aspects of a document. Common mistakes discussed include typos, punctuation errors, factual inaccuracies, bad formatting, and copyright issues. The document provides many examples of real-world mistakes and discusses the importance of proofreading various types of media like print, online, and social media. It emphasizes taking one's time and having a careful eye to catch any errors.
This document provides 8 tips for creating a great slide presentation including ensuring good color contrast between the background and text, adding your logo to the master page to build brand awareness, using a sans serif font and limiting animations and bullets to one level for simplicity. It also recommends adding relevant diagrams and high resolution images, making slides printable, and maintaining a consistent style while avoiding standard templates.
This document provides an executive summary and overview of the integrated facilities management industry. It discusses the global market size and growth rate, top global service providers in the industry, levels of market maturity in different regions, average contract periods, key negotiation factors, and impactful cost components. The supply and cost structures are analyzed, along with sourcing models, pricing approaches, and best practices. Regional differences and emerging engagement strategies are also reviewed at a high level.
Tutorial how to use a picture as a presentation slide backgroundFreelance
http://www.carlkwan.com As promised, here's the tutorial on using a picture as a PowerPoint background. This also works for anyone like me who uses Apple's Keynote.
Why should you do this?
Well, if your slides stand out from normal presentation slides, your presentation will stick better in the audience's mind.
In the slides, you'll see the following...
1. Slides from a real presentation that I fixed and added pictures for the backgrounds.
2. You'll see the Before, then I’ll show you how to get from the Before to the After.
The steps I took can be done in PowerPoint or Keynote. The slides in the example presentation were all made in PowerPoint for Mac. Don't worry, as pretty much everything in the PC version of PowerPoint does the same thing.
So here are the six steps I took:
1. Alignment is a fast way to make a presentation more professional looking; use a left-align as your default to avoid design faults.
2. Use pictures that are relevant to your topic; make sure the picture size is the same or bigger than your slide size.
3. If a picture doesn’t have good colours, change it to black and white.
4. Make your titles bigger to create contrast and to help the audience see better.
5. Don't trap text in a bordered text box... Set it free!
6. Use a black box set at 75% transparency to use as a background for your text.
This document provides tips for creating effective PowerPoint slides, including outlines, structure, fonts, color, backgrounds, graphs, images, conclusions, and questions. Key recommendations are to use outlines and point form, limit text per slide, use large readable fonts, choose high-contrast font colors, keep backgrounds simple and consistent, include titles on graphs, and end with a conclusion slide summarizing the main points and inviting questions. The document cautions against overly long paragraphs of text, small fonts, distracting colors and backgrounds, and images without relevance to the topic.
To make a good presentation, keep it simple with a large font size and use color to emphasize key points. Practice your presentation and be prepared to skip unnecessary slides if you run out of time. Visuals like pictures are more effective than just words, so include images when possible.
This document discusses air sports tourism opportunities in Turkey, including paragliding, hot air ballooning, skydiving, and ultralight aviation. It lists popular locations for these activities, such as Ölüdeniz for paragliding, Cappadocia for hot air ballooning due to its unique landscape, and drop zones in Ankara, İnönü, and Efes for skydiving. Turkey has good conditions for air sports and offers visitors chances to experience activities like paragliding tandem flights and hot air balloon rides that provide scenic views of the country.
The document provides tips on how to create an effective PowerPoint presentation. It notes that the goal of most presenters is to do a good PowerPoint presentation, as a good presentation determines audience response. It recommends giving thought to the information and audience benefits before starting, making a draft of slide styles, presenting information logically from left to right in a sequence, using titles that are easily readable, ensuring font and background color contrast, limiting the number of slides but covering all points, utilizing graphics to replace text on some slides, applying limited animation to grab attention without distraction, reviewing for errors, and getting feedback from others.
The document provides dos and don'ts for presentations. It recommends arriving early and using few slides to emphasize key ideas. Presenters should state their point with interesting material using visuals like pictures, graphs and quotes where needed. They should maintain composure, make eye contact, speak loudly and use quotes to engage audiences. Presentations should have introductions and be timed correctly with good body language. Things to avoid include starting without an intro, using too many slides or small fonts, reading slides verbatim and using unnecessary gestures. Presentations also shouldn't use too much jargon, charts or drone on longly.
What is PowerPoint? What kind of work is usually done in PowerPoint? What is Slide? How to create a new Slide? What is Animation? How much is usually kind of Animation? What is Transition?
The document provides dos and don'ts for creating effective PowerPoint presentations:
1. Do organize thoughts before starting, use outlines, spell check content, and limit text on slides.
2. Don't work on visuals before text, use too many graphics, or read slides directly.
3. Tips include using keywords, consistent formatting, high contrast colors, proper spacing and alignment, and practicing presentations.
5 teknik pembukaan presentasi by mustofa thovids (slide presentation expert)Mustofa Thovids
Dokumen tersebut memberikan saran tentang teknik pembukaan presentasi yang efektif dalam 5 menit pertama untuk membuat kesan yang kuat. Beberapa teknik yang disarankan adalah memilih salah satu atau menggabungkan teknik seperti cerita pengantar, pertanyaan, pernyataan menarik, statistik mengejutkan, atau citra yang menarik perhatian.
Like double edged swords, blind dates, and nuclear power plants, either a PowerPoint presentation can go really well and make you look totally awesome or it can completely suck and be the scourge of your existence. If you’re a savvy panda you’re no doubt aware that there are certain flaws in presentation design which can wreck an otherwise perfectly good slide presentation.
In case you’re well-versed in the do’s of presentation design but need some reinforcement about the don’ts to make sure you don’t screw up an otherwise perfect presentation, here are FIVE PRESENTATION DESIGN TIPS to remember the next time you create a presentation.
Diagram Mistakes in Presentation Slide DesignPeter Zvirinsky
The document discusses three common mistakes to avoid when designing diagrams for presentations: (1) including too much information on a slide and lacking white space, (2) having an unreadable and chaotic layout with incorrect shapes alignment, and (3) lacking consistency in graphical styles, fonts, and elements. It provides examples of poor diagrams that demonstrate these mistakes and improved diagrams that have more white space, aligned shapes, and consistent formatting. The key to creating readable professional diagrams is to follow these three simple design tricks: having white space, aligned shapes, and consistent graphical style and font use.
This PowerPoint presentation provides dos and don'ts for creating effective presentations. It recommends using easy-to-read sans-serif fonts like Arial or Century Gothic. Slides should not be overloaded with too much text or complex backgrounds as that makes them difficult to read. Key guidelines include using fonts larger than 24 points, limiting text to 7 words per line, and practicing presentations from a distance to ensure readability. Sources should be properly credited.
This powerpoint presentation defines entrepreneurship and discusses its history and modern applications. It begins by defining an entrepreneur as someone who organizes and manages a business while taking on financial risk. It notes that agricultural students have been involved in entrepreneurship since the early 20th century through programs like raising livestock and growing crops. Today, agricultural entrepreneurship can involve many diverse activities beyond farming like custom harvesting or operating a small engine repair service. The presentation concludes by discussing characteristics of successful entrepreneurs and different types like social and lifestyle entrepreneurs.
The document provides examples of standard, boring presentation templates and encourages the creation of unique, visually appealing templates instead. It emphasizes using fewer words and more images per slide, varying fonts and colors, and breaking content into multiple slides to keep audiences engaged. Inspiration sources like design blogs and galleries of infographics and slide designs are recommended for making impactful presentations that attract and impress audiences.
This document provides tips and examples for proofreading documents to catch mistakes. It discusses the difference between editing and proofreading and emphasizes closely examining all aspects of a document. Common mistakes discussed include typos, punctuation errors, factual inaccuracies, bad formatting, and copyright issues. The document provides many examples of real-world mistakes and discusses the importance of proofreading various types of media like print, online, and social media. It emphasizes taking one's time and having a careful eye to catch any errors.
The document discusses presentation skills and design. It provides tips for effective presentations, including telling stories with a situation, resolution and evidence (SCoRE). It emphasizes keeping presentations simple, using visuals to enhance delivery, and practicing restraint in preparation. Effective design is described as having contrast, repetition, alignment and proximity (CRAP). The goal is for presentations to be thoughtful yet simple reductions that ignite emotions and create attention and meaning for the audience.
How do corporate information managers assess the quality of information and s...Jeremy Depauw
Presentation of the paper I submitted ti IR9.0 conference at ITU of Copenhagen. It present the evidence of a perceived shift in the information quality assessment by corporate information specialists (competitive intelligence, environmental scanning, etc. )
Presenting: A Presentation about PresentationsKatie O'Brien
An internal presentation to the Fleishman-Hillard Creative Studio about what their associate creative director learned at a 2-day off-site presentation training, as well as tips on how to get into the speaking circuit. With beers.
When Agile teams begin to deliver products incrementally, new opportunities open up at the portfolio level, delivering strategic business value. However, the traditional approach to portfolio management — which depends upon long-range forecasting and fixed financial controls — breaks down as business environments grow more complex, leaving portfolio managers ill-equipped to reap the potential benefits of their Agile programs.
Crowdfunding is a method of raising capital by collecting small amounts of money from a large number of people online. It is linked to social media as projects can go viral and gain support. Successful crowdfunding campaigns typically have clear reward tiers, engage their existing community, carefully select their project and platform, and develop a publishing plan to promote their campaign. Kirsty Burnham from SoLoCo will discuss her experience with crowdfunding and take questions.
How to make an effective presentation, focusing on investment pitches. Presented by Ken Berkun to the Hawaii Inventor's Association on September 24, 2013.
Let's Integrate MuleSoft RPA, COMPOSER, APM with AWS IDP along with Slackshyamraj55
Discover the seamless integration of RPA (Robotic Process Automation), COMPOSER, and APM with AWS IDP enhanced with Slack notifications. Explore how these technologies converge to streamline workflows, optimize performance, and ensure secure access, all while leveraging the power of AWS IDP and real-time communication via Slack notifications.
FREE A4 Cyber Security Awareness Posters-Social Engineering part 3Data Hops
Free A4 downloadable and printable Cyber Security, Social Engineering Safety and security Training Posters . Promote security awareness in the home or workplace. Lock them Out From training providers datahops.com
Generating privacy-protected synthetic data using Secludy and MilvusZilliz
During this demo, the founders of Secludy will demonstrate how their system utilizes Milvus to store and manipulate embeddings for generating privacy-protected synthetic data. Their approach not only maintains the confidentiality of the original data but also enhances the utility and scalability of LLMs under privacy constraints. Attendees, including machine learning engineers, data scientists, and data managers, will witness first-hand how Secludy's integration with Milvus empowers organizations to harness the power of LLMs securely and efficiently.
Your One-Stop Shop for Python Success: Top 10 US Python Development Providersakankshawande
Simplify your search for a reliable Python development partner! This list presents the top 10 trusted US providers offering comprehensive Python development services, ensuring your project's success from conception to completion.
Skybuffer SAM4U tool for SAP license adoptionTatiana Kojar
Manage and optimize your license adoption and consumption with SAM4U, an SAP free customer software asset management tool.
SAM4U, an SAP complimentary software asset management tool for customers, delivers a detailed and well-structured overview of license inventory and usage with a user-friendly interface. We offer a hosted, cost-effective, and performance-optimized SAM4U setup in the Skybuffer Cloud environment. You retain ownership of the system and data, while we manage the ABAP 7.58 infrastructure, ensuring fixed Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) and exceptional services through the SAP Fiori interface.
TrustArc Webinar - 2024 Global Privacy SurveyTrustArc
How does your privacy program stack up against your peers? What challenges are privacy teams tackling and prioritizing in 2024?
In the fifth annual Global Privacy Benchmarks Survey, we asked over 1,800 global privacy professionals and business executives to share their perspectives on the current state of privacy inside and outside of their organizations. This year’s report focused on emerging areas of importance for privacy and compliance professionals, including considerations and implications of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies, building brand trust, and different approaches for achieving higher privacy competence scores.
See how organizational priorities and strategic approaches to data security and privacy are evolving around the globe.
This webinar will review:
- The top 10 privacy insights from the fifth annual Global Privacy Benchmarks Survey
- The top challenges for privacy leaders, practitioners, and organizations in 2024
- Key themes to consider in developing and maintaining your privacy program
Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift.pdfTosin Akinosho
Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift
Overview
Dive into the world of anomaly detection on edge devices with our comprehensive hands-on tutorial. This SlideShare presentation will guide you through the entire process, from data collection and model training to edge deployment and real-time monitoring. Perfect for those looking to implement robust anomaly detection systems on resource-constrained IoT/edge devices.
Key Topics Covered
1. Introduction to Anomaly Detection
- Understand the fundamentals of anomaly detection and its importance in identifying unusual behavior or failures in systems.
2. Understanding Edge (IoT)
- Learn about edge computing and IoT, and how they enable real-time data processing and decision-making at the source.
3. What is ArgoCD?
- Discover ArgoCD, a declarative, GitOps continuous delivery tool for Kubernetes, and its role in deploying applications on edge devices.
4. Deployment Using ArgoCD for Edge Devices
- Step-by-step guide on deploying anomaly detection models on edge devices using ArgoCD.
5. Introduction to Apache Kafka and S3
- Explore Apache Kafka for real-time data streaming and Amazon S3 for scalable storage solutions.
6. Viewing Kafka Messages in the Data Lake
- Learn how to view and analyze Kafka messages stored in a data lake for better insights.
7. What is Prometheus?
- Get to know Prometheus, an open-source monitoring and alerting toolkit, and its application in monitoring edge devices.
8. Monitoring Application Metrics with Prometheus
- Detailed instructions on setting up Prometheus to monitor the performance and health of your anomaly detection system.
9. What is Camel K?
- Introduction to Camel K, a lightweight integration framework built on Apache Camel, designed for Kubernetes.
10. Configuring Camel K Integrations for Data Pipelines
- Learn how to configure Camel K for seamless data pipeline integrations in your anomaly detection workflow.
11. What is a Jupyter Notebook?
- Overview of Jupyter Notebooks, an open-source web application for creating and sharing documents with live code, equations, visualizations, and narrative text.
12. Jupyter Notebooks with Code Examples
- Hands-on examples and code snippets in Jupyter Notebooks to help you implement and test anomaly detection models.
Ivanti’s Patch Tuesday breakdown goes beyond patching your applications and brings you the intelligence and guidance needed to prioritize where to focus your attention first. Catch early analysis on our Ivanti blog, then join industry expert Chris Goettl for the Patch Tuesday Webinar Event. There we’ll do a deep dive into each of the bulletins and give guidance on the risks associated with the newly-identified vulnerabilities.
This presentation provides valuable insights into effective cost-saving techniques on AWS. Learn how to optimize your AWS resources by rightsizing, increasing elasticity, picking the right storage class, and choosing the best pricing model. Additionally, discover essential governance mechanisms to ensure continuous cost efficiency. Whether you are new to AWS or an experienced user, this presentation provides clear and practical tips to help you reduce your cloud costs and get the most out of your budget.
5th LF Energy Power Grid Model Meet-up SlidesDanBrown980551
5th Power Grid Model Meet-up
It is with great pleasure that we extend to you an invitation to the 5th Power Grid Model Meet-up, scheduled for 6th June 2024. This event will adopt a hybrid format, allowing participants to join us either through an online Mircosoft Teams session or in person at TU/e located at Den Dolech 2, Eindhoven, Netherlands. The meet-up will be hosted by Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e), a research university specializing in engineering science & technology.
Power Grid Model
The global energy transition is placing new and unprecedented demands on Distribution System Operators (DSOs). Alongside upgrades to grid capacity, processes such as digitization, capacity optimization, and congestion management are becoming vital for delivering reliable services.
Power Grid Model is an open source project from Linux Foundation Energy and provides a calculation engine that is increasingly essential for DSOs. It offers a standards-based foundation enabling real-time power systems analysis, simulations of electrical power grids, and sophisticated what-if analysis. In addition, it enables in-depth studies and analysis of the electrical power grid’s behavior and performance. This comprehensive model incorporates essential factors such as power generation capacity, electrical losses, voltage levels, power flows, and system stability.
Power Grid Model is currently being applied in a wide variety of use cases, including grid planning, expansion, reliability, and congestion studies. It can also help in analyzing the impact of renewable energy integration, assessing the effects of disturbances or faults, and developing strategies for grid control and optimization.
What to expect
For the upcoming meetup we are organizing, we have an exciting lineup of activities planned:
-Insightful presentations covering two practical applications of the Power Grid Model.
-An update on the latest advancements in Power Grid -Model technology during the first and second quarters of 2024.
-An interactive brainstorming session to discuss and propose new feature requests.
-An opportunity to connect with fellow Power Grid Model enthusiasts and users.
leewayhertz.com-AI in predictive maintenance Use cases technologies benefits ...alexjohnson7307
Predictive maintenance is a proactive approach that anticipates equipment failures before they happen. At the forefront of this innovative strategy is Artificial Intelligence (AI), which brings unprecedented precision and efficiency. AI in predictive maintenance is transforming industries by reducing downtime, minimizing costs, and enhancing productivity.
Trusted Execution Environment for Decentralized Process MiningLucaBarbaro3
Presentation of the paper "Trusted Execution Environment for Decentralized Process Mining" given during the CAiSE 2024 Conference in Cyprus on June 7, 2024.
15. The Problem
• Too much information in the presentation
• Too much information on the slides
• Reading
• No Preparation
• Not knowing their subject and
• Expect a PowerPoint
Slide #16
24. “The use of the PowerPoint presentation
has been a disaster. It should be ditched.”
– John Sweller
Slide #25
25. Crutch
• It’s not a teleprompter
• It’s not a substitute for handouts
• It’s not a thought organizer
– PowerPoint has been accused of oversimplifying
complex issues
– PowerPoint has been accused of promoting lazy
thinking (The thought that everything can be reduced
to a couple of bullets)
• It can stifle conversation with the audience
• It turns poor presenters into robots
Slide #26
60. A shark must keep moving or die
A blog must be regularly updated or it too
will die
How often should you update your Blog?
Some successful blogs are updated once
a week, others several times a day.
The key is to be consistent.
69. A Wise Person Knows…
• When and how to make “the exception to every
rule.”
• When and how to improvise. Wisdom is “moral
Jazz.”
• How to choose among virtues or rules when they
conflict.
• Finally, a wise person uses these moral skills in
pursuit of the right aims, to serve and not to
manipulate.
71. Iron
• An abundant metal, makes up
5.6% of Earth’s crust
• Properties:
– Shaped, sharpened and
welded
– Strong and Durable
• Accounts for >95% of metals
used
• Iron ores discovered in
Michigan’s Upper Peninsula
• Soon found other ores in upper
Wisconsin and Minnesota
Slide #73
72. Iron ores make up 5.6% of the Earth’s crust
and account for 95% of the metals used
Is strong and Can be shaped,
durable sharpened and welded
73. This sentence headline makes an assertion on the first topic
in no more than two lines
Image(s)
supporting
above assertion
If necessary, identify key assumption or background for
audience—keep to two lines (18–24 point type)
Slide #75
75
75. This sentence headline makes an assertion
on the second topic in no more than two lines
Call-out, if necessary:
Call-out, if necessary:
keep to one or two lines
keep to one or two lines
Image or equations supporting
the headline assertion
Call-out, if necessary:
Slide #77
keep to one or two lines
77
91. Selected Income Characteristics, continued
C o u n ty o f C ity o f
V an F ort
C h ara cteristic Hunt K a u fm an R ain s R o ckw all Za n d t C o m m erce D alla s W o rth Plan o
In co m e, 1999
M ed ia n H o u se h o ld 36,752 44,783 33,712 65,164 35,029 24,065 37,628 37,074 78,722
M ed ia n F am ily 44,388 50,354 40,329 71,448 41,175 37,284 40,921 42,939 91,162
P er C a p ita 17,554 18,827 16,442 28,573 16,930 14,444 22,183 18,800 36,514
R e al In co m e , Percen t
C h a ng e 1989-1 999
M ed ia n H o u se h o ld 11.9 26.5 19.5 18.4 28.1 12.7 5.5 7.6 12.5
M ed ia n F am ily 12.0 23.8 21.9 16.1 27.0 29.5 - 1.2 6.8 18.0
P er C a p ita 14.2 25.4 18.3 22.4 28.8 15.2 4.9 10.1 28.9
H o u se h o ld Inco m e C a teg o ry,
B y N u m b er 1999
H o u se h o ld s 28,751 24,363 3,637 14,581 18,233 2,839 452,009 195,309 81,179
L e ss th an $10,00 0 3,348 2,090 442 492 2,294 702 47,522 20,658 1,982
$1 0,000 to $14,99 9 2,283 1,397 309 421 1,512 316 27,270 13,486 1,595
$1 5,000 to $24,99 9 4,090 2,528 575 1,044 2,763 443 65,666 28,887 3,998
$2 5,000 to $34,99 9 3,953 3,150 560 1,334 2,540 374 68,020 28,592 5,670
$3 5,000 to $49,99 9 4,957 4,475 663 1,970 3,264 326 77,132 34,179 9,446
$5 0,000 to $74,99 9 5,656 5,384 633 3,272 3,482 368 74,160 35,369 15,798
$7 5,000 to $99,99 9 2,501 2,804 279 2,381 1,275 168 36,030 16,814 12,851
$1 00,000 to $149,999 1,348 1,842 135 2,178 732 82 29,478 11,123 16,880
$1 50,000 o r m o re 615 693 41 1,489 371 60 26,731 6,201 12,959
H o u se h o ld Inco m e C a teg o ry,
B y P ercen t 1999
H o u se h o ld s 100.0 1 00.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 1 00.0 1 00.0 1 00.0
L e ss th an $10,00 0 11.6 8.6 12.2 3.4 12.6 24.7 10.5 10.6 2.4
$1 0,000 to $14,99 9 8.0 5.7 8.4 2.9 8.3 11.2 6.0 6.9 2.0
$1 5,000 to $24,99 9 14.2 10.4 15.9 7.1 15.1 15.6 14.6 14.8 4.9
$2 5,000 to $34,99 9 13.8 12.9 15.4 9.2 14.0 13.1 15.0 14.6 7.0
$3 5,000 to $49,99 9 17.2 18.4 18.2 13.5 17.9 11.5 17.1 17.5 11.7
$5 0,000 to $74,99 9 19.7 22.1 17.4 22.4 19.1 13.0 16.4 18.1 19.4
$7 5,000 to $99,99 9 8.7 11.5 7.7 16.4 7.0 5.9 8.0 8.6 15.8
$1 00,000 to $149,999 4.7 7.6 3.7 14.9 4.0 2.9 6.5 5.7 20.8
$1 50,000 o r m o re 2.1 2.8 1.1 10.2 2.0 2.1 5.9 3.2 16.0
95. Use of a standard for
PowerPoint™
Presentations for TV
96. PowerPoint on TV: The bad
• TV Resolution and Computer
Resolutions are different
– Computer Resolutions are much better
• The conversion from PowerPoint to
TV is not very tolerant of some colors
97. PowerPoint on TV: The bad
• Stay away from the edges
– The conversion process might ‘clip’
about .75 inch from all sides
– A good open border makes a slide
appear cleaner
98. PowerPoint on TV: The bad
• Small Fonts are Hard To Read
– Use at least a 24 point font for the
header
– Don’t use anything smaller than an 18
point font for other text
99. PowerPoint on TV: The bad
• A Big Block of Text is Hard To Read
In fact, researchers have found that with most slides being
on the screen for only about 20 seconds, the reader is
forced to look at the start of the sentence and jump to the
end or read it once and want to read it again. People read
at different rates and if you are talking and there is a
screen full of text, they will start reading and either tune
you out or read along or just ignore you. Tell them what
you want to say and if you need a note to help, write it
down somewhere. It all starts to look like a big block of
stuff that is hard to read and then is difficult to convey. Is
this not getting harder and harder to read and it is not at
the smallest size. This is 19 point type. It just is confusing
and messy. And to think, you know the concept from the
header: A big block of text is hard to read.
100. PowerPoint on TV: The bad
• Some colors are bad for TV
– Avoid pure RED
• It bleeds on TV
• Some TVs will make a buzzing sound
– Use a Brick RED if you need a red
color
101. PowerPoint on TV: The Good
• This background is better
• Short bullets are better
– Don’t read from the slides
• Spread text out over several slides
102. The outer box is the limit of
visible area for many TVs
The Inner box is the TV Safe Area. It is
best to stay in this area.
103. PowerPoint on TV: The Good
• A well-thought out presentation will
effectively convey your message
104. PowerPoint on TV: The Good
• Short bullets are better
– Don’t read from the slides
• Spread text out over several slides
105. This is a second option
• Don’t use blocks of text
– It is very ineffective
• Punctuation is not needed
– If you need it regularly, your bullets are
too long
– Use only when necessary
– Be consistent
107. MGTF Process and Timeline
Oct 07 July 08 Dec 08 June 09
Establish Preliminary Detailed
Impact Implementation
Study
MGTF Assessment
www.nceastmgtf.com
108.
109. Marine Corps Installations East
Through December 2008
80,000
70,000
60,000
50,000
59,044
40,000 56,623
53,705 73,963
51,730 71,963
30,000
20,000
10,000
10,908
10,738
10,351 10,351
0
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2012
Total Planned Civilians Active Duty
110. New River Place –
Zoning Text 50’ W x 180’ D Lot
Amendment
9,000 sq. ft. Lot
111. New River Place –
Zoning Text 50’ W x 180’ D Lot
Amendment
25’ Front
Setback
6’ Side
Setback
25’ Rear
Setback
9,000 sq. ft. Lot
112. New River Place –
Zoning Text 50’ W x 180’ D Lot
Amendment
25’ Front
Setback
6’ Side
Setback
25’ Rear
Setback
9,000 sq. ft. Lot
113. New River Place –
Zoning Text Two 25’ W x 180’ D Lots
Amendment
25’ Front
Setback
6’ Side
Setback
25’ Rear
Setback
Two 4,500 sq. ft. Lots
116. New Business
Consideration
FY 2010
Capital Improvements Plan
Agenda Item #11
Slide #119
117. Community/Public Safety
Project Name Status Total Cost
Community Programs
Sturgeon City Boardwalk III 600,000
Chaney Creek Bioremediation Ph. II Exec 350,000
Fire
Georgetown Training Facility 204,000
Fire Station #5 2,946,500
Fire Station #6 Exec 3,302,500
Renovate Northwoods Fire Station Exec 486,750
Renovate Fire Station #4 Exec 497,500
Slide #120
118. New Business
Budget Amendment
FY 2009 Public-Private
Partnerships
Agenda Item #12
Slide #121
119. Review Criteria
10% Obvious Need for Support
Historical Service or Demonstrated
15%
ability to perform
Alignment to Mission, Vision or
40%
Goals
15% Good Nonprofit Practices
20% Cost Effectiveness of Proposal
Slide #122
121. ACCOMPLISHMENTS/PROGRESS
RECYCLING
• $121,209 saved by municipal crews assuming recycling
collection
• Established two crews for curbside recycling collection
• Recycling participation increased from 36% to present 44%
• 1124 tons of recyclable materials collected in FY06-07
• 1427 tons of recyclable materials collected in FY07-08
• $112,029 savings in disposal fees
122. ACCOMPLISHMENTS/PROGRESS
CURBSIDE COLLECTIONS
Refuse collection crews decreased from 9 to 6
Sanitation personnel decreased from 41 to 37 employees
through attrition
For FY 06-07 & FY 07-08 approximately $128,000 saved in
salaries, not including benefits
Worker’s compensation cost decreased
CY 2005 - $79,505.51
CY 2006 - $174,816.64
CY 2007 - $6,915.50
CY 2008 - $15,739.64
142. Crutch
• It’s not a teleprompter
• It’s not a substitute for handouts
• It’s not a thought organizer
– PowerPoint has been accused of oversimplifying
complex issues
– PowerPoint has been accused of promoting lazy
thinking (The thought that everything can be reduced
to a couple of bullets)
• It can stifle conversation with the audience
• It turns poor presenters into robots
Slide #145
146. Next
• What are your Experiences
• What’s the impact of PowerPoint on your
organization?
• What Are Your Organization’s Rules?
• How do you guide PowerPoint on TV?
– Creation of a NC3C Guide?
Slide #149