This document provides PowerPoint tips and tricks to help users spend less time on layout and more on content. It recommends customizing the toolbar and enabling features like snap to grid and rulers. It also suggests learning useful shortcuts. The document then covers building blocks like colors, fonts, shapes, pictures and tables. It provides tips on slide design including keeping it simple. It discusses content aspects like scope, structure and visualization. The document recommends avoiding unnecessary animations and templates.
This document provides instruction on graphing quadratics. It begins by outlining what students should already know, like the definition of a quadratic and what a vertex is. It then covers how to graph quadratics in vertex form, zeroes form, and standard form. For each form, it explains how to identify the vertex or zeroes, make an x-y table of values, and graph the parabola. Examples are worked through and practice problems are provided for students to try. Bonus materials at the end demonstrate how to graph on a calculator and find the vertex. The goal is for students to learn how to graph a quadratic from any of the three common forms.
This document provides PowerPoint tips and tricks to help users spend less time on layout and more on content, and to make better presentations. It discusses customizing the toolbar and enabling features like snap to grid and rulers. It also offers advice on colors, fonts, shapes, tables, charts, and avoiding unnecessary animations. The overall goal is to share techniques to streamline the creation of clear, effective presentations.
Engineering Graphics provides graphical representations of objects using drawings. Drawings offer a better understanding of an object's shape, size, and appearance compared to verbal or written descriptions. Drawings are commonly used in engineering and other fields as an effective communication method. There are different types of drawings like orthographic projections, isometric drawings, and perspective drawings. Basic drawing tools include compasses, rulers, protractors, and mini drafters. Drawings must follow specific layouts and sheet formats depending on their purpose and scope.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using Ruby to automate and script tests in Internet Explorer through OLE/COM. It interacts with the browser's Document Object Model (DOM) to represent and manipulate web pages programmatically. Tests are created by viewing the page source, using Watir methods in IRB, or inspecting the DOM with tools to programmatically emulate user actions in the browser.
The document provides steps to help choose between 100 wedding venues:
1. Narrow your options down to less than 12 favorite venues.
2. Consider your guest list size and whether venues can accommodate your expected number of guests, cutting options in half.
3. Set a budget and discuss pricing with remaining venues, typically eliminating half again.
4. Ensure the venue is centrally located for guests, bringing options to 2-3 choices.
5. Visit top venues with friends to decide which venue is best.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the source, using Watir's show methods, DOM inspectors, or by building your own scripts to use the OLE/COM interface to automate IE or other technologies.
This document provides instruction on graphing quadratics. It begins by outlining what students should already know, like the definition of a quadratic and what a vertex is. It then covers how to graph quadratics in vertex form, zeroes form, and standard form. For each form, it explains how to identify the vertex or zeroes, make an x-y table of values, and graph the parabola. Examples are worked through and practice problems are provided for students to try. Bonus materials at the end demonstrate how to graph on a calculator and find the vertex. The goal is for students to learn how to graph a quadratic from any of the three common forms.
This document provides PowerPoint tips and tricks to help users spend less time on layout and more on content, and to make better presentations. It discusses customizing the toolbar and enabling features like snap to grid and rulers. It also offers advice on colors, fonts, shapes, tables, charts, and avoiding unnecessary animations. The overall goal is to share techniques to streamline the creation of clear, effective presentations.
Engineering Graphics provides graphical representations of objects using drawings. Drawings offer a better understanding of an object's shape, size, and appearance compared to verbal or written descriptions. Drawings are commonly used in engineering and other fields as an effective communication method. There are different types of drawings like orthographic projections, isometric drawings, and perspective drawings. Basic drawing tools include compasses, rulers, protractors, and mini drafters. Drawings must follow specific layouts and sheet formats depending on their purpose and scope.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using Ruby to automate and script tests in Internet Explorer through OLE/COM. It interacts with the browser's Document Object Model (DOM) to represent and manipulate web pages programmatically. Tests are created by viewing the page source, using Watir methods in IRB, or inspecting the DOM with tools to programmatically emulate user actions in the browser.
The document provides steps to help choose between 100 wedding venues:
1. Narrow your options down to less than 12 favorite venues.
2. Consider your guest list size and whether venues can accommodate your expected number of guests, cutting options in half.
3. Set a budget and discuss pricing with remaining venues, typically eliminating half again.
4. Ensure the venue is centrally located for guests, bringing options to 2-3 choices.
5. Visit top venues with friends to decide which venue is best.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the source, using Watir's show methods, DOM inspectors, or by building your own scripts to use the OLE/COM interface to automate IE or other technologies.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to programmatically control and verify elements on the page.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and automate web tests. It drives the browser by accessing the Document Object Model (DOM) which represents elements of a web page and is supported by most browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspectors to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using Ruby to automate and script tests in Internet Explorer through OLE/COM. It interacts with the browser's Document Object Model (DOM) to represent and manipulate web pages programmatically. Tests are created by viewing the page source, using Watir methods in IRB, or inspecting the DOM with tools to programmatically emulate user actions in the browser.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the source, using Watir's show methods, DOM inspectors, or by building your own scripts to use the OLE/COM interface to automate a browser.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to programmatically control and verify elements on the page.
La Unión Europea ha propuesto un nuevo paquete de sanciones contra Rusia que incluye un embargo al petróleo. El embargo prohibiría la importación de petróleo ruso a la UE y restringiría el acceso de buques rusos a puertos europeos. Sin embargo, Hungría se opone firmemente al embargo de petróleo, argumentando que su economía depende en gran medida de las importaciones de energía rusa.
This document provides a tutorial on using PowerPoint effectively. It discusses customizing the toolbar, using shortcuts, slide structure, fonts, colors, tables, charts and avoiding unnecessary animations. The goal is to help users spend less time on layout and more on content, and create better presentations. Tips include using templates, aligning objects on slides, and ensuring slide titles reflect the content. Overall, the tutorial aims to share best practices for streamlining PowerPoint design and focusing on meaningful content.
The document provides an introduction to Adobe Illustrator, explaining that it is a vector drawing program used to create illustrations, logos, and other graphics. It describes some key features of vector graphics like scalability and outlines the Illustrator workspace. The document also demonstrates how to use basic shape tools and the pencil tool to draw in Illustrator.
This document discusses equation numbering and referencing in Microsoft Word using MathType. It provides instructions on:
- Inserting equation numbers in various formats using the equation numbering commands. The numbers and references will automatically update when new equations are added.
- Equation references can be placed in footnotes and endnotes.
- Equation numbers are separate from the equations and will not be deleted if the equation is removed. References link to the number, not the equation itself.
This document provides directions for a project where students will create a repetitive, unified artwork in Photoshop inspired by Andy Warhol's style using color schemes. Students are instructed to find a product or logo to use, sketch designs, ink a line drawing, scan it, and open it in Photoshop. They are then told to select colors using the four color schemes, fill spaces, arrange the images in layers, and save/print the work. The document includes a rubric for self-assessment on composition, craftsmanship, use of color schemes, and professionalism.
This document provides guidance on using PowerPoint to create effective presentations. It discusses the basic functions and toolbars in PowerPoint, how to design and organize slides, and tips for balancing text, images, and other design elements. The key steps covered include learning the various toolbars in PowerPoint, how to create and format slides, inserting and organizing text, images, charts and other visual elements, using animation effects, and balancing the design of slides for clarity and readability.
This document provides guidance on using PowerPoint to design effective presentations. It discusses how to select a presentation option, create slides, organize text, images, and effects, and balance design elements. The key points are:
- PowerPoint allows blank presentations for full customization or templates for guided design.
- Slides should be kept simple with short bullet points reinforcing the speech.
- Consistent formatting, readable fonts, and complimentary colors improve visuals.
- Animation and media should emphasize important points without distracting from the content.
- Effective slides balance different elements so no one part overpowers the others.
This document provides an introduction to using charts in PowerPoint presentations. It discusses the most popular chart types including line charts, bar charts, column charts, and pie charts. It explains how to insert charts in PowerPoint and describes each chart type in more detail, providing examples. The document also includes a quick review of the key points about PowerPoint and popular chart types used within presentations.
This document provides an introduction and overview of a SketchUp training manual. It discusses:
- The author Jan Liu's background and qualifications working as an architect using SketchUp.
- An outline of the course objectives which are to learn fundamental SketchUp tools and techniques such as drawing shapes, modifying objects, and rendering surfaces.
- A brief description of the differences between the free SketchUp Make version and paid SketchUp Pro version.
- Instructions on getting started with SketchUp by adding toolbars and an explanation of the interface and coordinate system.
This document provides guidance on using PowerPoint to create effective presentations. It discusses the basic functions and toolbars in PowerPoint, how to design and organize slides, and tips for balancing text, images, and other design elements. The key steps covered include selecting a presentation type, learning the toolbars, creating and organizing slides, inserting text, images, and other media, using animation effects sparingly, and balancing design elements so the presentation is easy to follow.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to programmatically control and verify elements on the page.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and automate web tests. It drives the browser by accessing the Document Object Model (DOM) which represents elements of a web page and is supported by most browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspectors to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using Ruby to automate and script tests in Internet Explorer through OLE/COM. It interacts with the browser's Document Object Model (DOM) to represent and manipulate web pages programmatically. Tests are created by viewing the page source, using Watir methods in IRB, or inspecting the DOM with tools to programmatically emulate user actions in the browser.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the source, using Watir's show methods, DOM inspectors, or by building your own scripts to use the OLE/COM interface to automate a browser.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to programmatically control and verify elements on the page.
La Unión Europea ha propuesto un nuevo paquete de sanciones contra Rusia que incluye un embargo al petróleo. El embargo prohibiría la importación de petróleo ruso a la UE y restringiría el acceso de buques rusos a puertos europeos. Sin embargo, Hungría se opone firmemente al embargo de petróleo, argumentando que su economía depende en gran medida de las importaciones de energía rusa.
This document provides a tutorial on using PowerPoint effectively. It discusses customizing the toolbar, using shortcuts, slide structure, fonts, colors, tables, charts and avoiding unnecessary animations. The goal is to help users spend less time on layout and more on content, and create better presentations. Tips include using templates, aligning objects on slides, and ensuring slide titles reflect the content. Overall, the tutorial aims to share best practices for streamlining PowerPoint design and focusing on meaningful content.
The document provides an introduction to Adobe Illustrator, explaining that it is a vector drawing program used to create illustrations, logos, and other graphics. It describes some key features of vector graphics like scalability and outlines the Illustrator workspace. The document also demonstrates how to use basic shape tools and the pencil tool to draw in Illustrator.
This document discusses equation numbering and referencing in Microsoft Word using MathType. It provides instructions on:
- Inserting equation numbers in various formats using the equation numbering commands. The numbers and references will automatically update when new equations are added.
- Equation references can be placed in footnotes and endnotes.
- Equation numbers are separate from the equations and will not be deleted if the equation is removed. References link to the number, not the equation itself.
This document provides directions for a project where students will create a repetitive, unified artwork in Photoshop inspired by Andy Warhol's style using color schemes. Students are instructed to find a product or logo to use, sketch designs, ink a line drawing, scan it, and open it in Photoshop. They are then told to select colors using the four color schemes, fill spaces, arrange the images in layers, and save/print the work. The document includes a rubric for self-assessment on composition, craftsmanship, use of color schemes, and professionalism.
This document provides guidance on using PowerPoint to create effective presentations. It discusses the basic functions and toolbars in PowerPoint, how to design and organize slides, and tips for balancing text, images, and other design elements. The key steps covered include learning the various toolbars in PowerPoint, how to create and format slides, inserting and organizing text, images, charts and other visual elements, using animation effects, and balancing the design of slides for clarity and readability.
This document provides guidance on using PowerPoint to design effective presentations. It discusses how to select a presentation option, create slides, organize text, images, and effects, and balance design elements. The key points are:
- PowerPoint allows blank presentations for full customization or templates for guided design.
- Slides should be kept simple with short bullet points reinforcing the speech.
- Consistent formatting, readable fonts, and complimentary colors improve visuals.
- Animation and media should emphasize important points without distracting from the content.
- Effective slides balance different elements so no one part overpowers the others.
This document provides an introduction to using charts in PowerPoint presentations. It discusses the most popular chart types including line charts, bar charts, column charts, and pie charts. It explains how to insert charts in PowerPoint and describes each chart type in more detail, providing examples. The document also includes a quick review of the key points about PowerPoint and popular chart types used within presentations.
This document provides an introduction and overview of a SketchUp training manual. It discusses:
- The author Jan Liu's background and qualifications working as an architect using SketchUp.
- An outline of the course objectives which are to learn fundamental SketchUp tools and techniques such as drawing shapes, modifying objects, and rendering surfaces.
- A brief description of the differences between the free SketchUp Make version and paid SketchUp Pro version.
- Instructions on getting started with SketchUp by adding toolbars and an explanation of the interface and coordinate system.
This document provides guidance on using PowerPoint to create effective presentations. It discusses the basic functions and toolbars in PowerPoint, how to design and organize slides, and tips for balancing text, images, and other design elements. The key steps covered include selecting a presentation type, learning the toolbars, creating and organizing slides, inserting text, images, and other media, using animation effects sparingly, and balancing design elements so the presentation is easy to follow.
Graphing Using Excel Part Ii 2008 FinishedStephanie
This document provides instructions for graphing data in Excel. It describes how to enter data, select the appropriate graph type, customize the graph by adding titles, labels, gridlines and legends, and format data series. The key steps are to enter dependent and independent variables as data, select the scatter graph type, customize the graph by adding titles and labels for axes, and format data points using colors and shapes. Proper graphing in Excel requires both technical skills to build the graph as well as good graphing principles to communicate the data clearly.
Aimed at beginners to Inkscape and vector graphics, this bootcamp walks you through how to get started getting productive with Inkscape. It includes a tour of the user interface and hints/tips around the most useful basic functions the software offers.
This guide provides instructions for using PowerPoint effectively:
- PowerPoint is presentation software that works similarly to Word and Excel. It allows adding text, images, charts and animations to slides.
- To create a presentation, select a blank or template option. Learn the various toolbars and views. Create slides using layouts and customize colors and fonts.
- Organize content by adding short, clear text to slides and using images and charts sparingly to reinforce key points. Limit fonts and animation effects to avoid distraction.
- Ensure a balanced design where no element overpowers others and the overall experience is pleasant and easy to understand. Practice your timed presentation.
THE DATA GEEKHere’s the perfect infographic template.docxarnoldmeredith47041
THE DATA GEEK
Here’s the perfect infographic template for highlighting data! Double-click on the charts and graphs below to edit the style. Right click and choose “Edit Data” to update the values.
This pie chart is great for displaying percentages / parts of a whole.
Use the line graph below to compare values over time.
Like pie charts, these doughnut charts are great for showing parts of a whole.
Use the bar chart below to compare values.
Use this space to write a short conclusion for
your infographic and/or to provide a call-to-action.
Use this text box to give some more context about the data you’re displaying. How is it helping to drive home your main point(s)? Is there anything confusing that needs to be explained in more detail?
Use this text box to give some more context about the data you’re displaying. How is it helping to drive home your main point(s)? Is there anything confusing that needs to be explained in more detail?
Your logo here:
Chart1Example 1Example 2Example 3Example 4
Series 1
Label the x-axis here
Label the y-axis here
Here’s a column chart, great for comparing values.
4.3
2.5
3.5
4.5
Sheet1Series 1Example 14.3Example 22.5Example 33.5Example 44.5To update the chart, enter data into this table. The data is automatically saved in the chart.
Chart11st Qtr2nd Qtr3rd Qtr4th Qtr
Sales
8.2
3.2
1.4
1.2
Sheet1Sales1st Qtr8.22nd Qtr3.23rd Qtr1.44th Qtr1.2To update the chart, enter data into this table. The data is automatically saved in the chart.
Chart1Category 1Category 1Category 1Category 2Category 2Category 2Category 3Category 3Category 3Category 4Category 4Category 4
Series 1
Series 2
Series 3
Label the x-axis here
Label the y-axis here
4.3
2.4
2
2.5
4.4
2
3.5
1.8
3
4.5
2.8
5
Sheet1Series 1Series 2Series 3Category 14.32.42Category 22.54.42Category 33.51.83Category 44.52.85To update the chart, enter data into this table. The data is automatically saved in the chart.
Chart11st Qtr2nd Qtr
Sales
8.2
3.2
Sheet1Sales1st Qtr8.22nd Qtr3.2To update the chart, enter data into this table. The data is automatically saved in the chart.
Chart11st Qtr2nd Qtr
Sales
3.2
8.2
Sheet1Sales1st Qtr3.22nd Qtr8.2To update the chart, enter data into this table. The data is automatically saved in the chart.
Chart11st Qtr2nd Qtr
Sales
3.2
8.2
Sheet1Sales1st Qtr3.22nd Qtr8.2To update the chart, enter data into this table. The data is automatically saved in the chart.
Chart1Example 1Example 2Example 3Example 4
Series 1
Label the x-axis here
4.3
2.5
3.5
4.5
Sheet1Series 1Example 14.3Example 22.5Example 33.5Example 44.5To update the chart, enter data into this table. The data is automatically saved in the chart.
Use this space to write a short conclusion for
your infographic and/or to provide a call-to-action.
CONVEYING STATISTICS
There are times when we have a staggering amount of information that we can’t present with an image-heavy infographic. These times call for styles of design
that focus more on the fonts and how they can give yo.
This guide provides instructions for using PowerPoint to create effective presentations. It discusses the various toolbars in PowerPoint and how to select presentation options. It also covers how to create and organize slides, including adding text, images, charts and animation. The guide emphasizes keeping design elements balanced so the presentation is easy to follow and visually pleasing.
This guide provides instructions for using PowerPoint to create effective presentations. It discusses the various toolbars in PowerPoint and how to select presentation options. It also covers how to create and organize slides, including adding text, images, charts and animation effects. The guide emphasizes balancing different design elements on slides to ensure the content is clear and visually pleasing.
This guide provides instructions for using PowerPoint to create effective presentations. It discusses the various toolbars in PowerPoint and how to select presentation options. It also covers how to create and organize slides, including adding text, images, charts and animation. The guide emphasizes keeping design elements balanced so the presentation is easy to follow and visually pleasing.
How to make a Poster Presentation in PowerPointLeonov Martin
This document provides guidance on creating effective poster presentations using PowerPoint. It discusses best practices for layout, including using logical organization, large visible text, balanced use of graphics and space, and high-resolution images. Key sections cover using PowerPoint to set dimensions and margins, arranging content in columns, importing text and figures, and proofreading the final poster. The goal is to visually convey research concisely and attract viewers to engage in discussion.
This document provides an overview of Chapter 1 (Numbers and Ratios) of a Mathematics textbook. Section 1.1 defines positive and negative integers and how to represent them on a number line. Section 1.2 covers basic arithmetic operations involving integers such as addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. It also discusses properties of operations like identity, commutative, associative, and distributive properties. Section 1.3 defines positive and negative fractions. Section 1.4 defines positive and negative decimals. Section 1.5 introduces ratios.
The document outlines seven habits of effective PowerPoint presentations: 1) start with a structured story, 2) standardize design language, 3) standardize written language, 4) animate to narrate not exaggerate, 5) show with images and tell with voiceover, 6) build slides around transitions, and 7) use a presentation remote. It provides tips and best practices for each habit, including examples of slide design, animation techniques, and effective narration.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using Ruby to automate and script tests in Internet Explorer through OLE/COM. It interacts with the browser's Document Object Model (DOM) to represent and manipulate web pages programmatically. Tests are created by viewing the page source, using Watir methods in IRB, or inspecting the DOM with tools to programmatically emulate user actions in the browser.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and automate web tests. It drives the browser to perform actions and tests functionality by accessing and manipulating the Document Object Model (DOM) of web pages, which represents the structure and elements of pages. Tests are created by viewing the source of pages, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to understand the DOM structure that the tests will interact with and verify.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and automate web tests. It drives the browser by accessing the Document Object Model (DOM) of the web page, which represents page elements that can be controlled via JavaScript. Tests interact with the DOM to programmatically simulate user actions on the browser. Watir provides methods to inspect elements in the DOM and write scripts to automate tasks.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to programmatically control and verify elements on the page.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to programmatically control and verify elements on the page.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to programmatically control and verify elements in the browser.
Watir works by using the OLE/COM Automation interface to control Internet Explorer and allow tests to drive the browser. It uses the Document Object Model (DOM) standard to represent and interact with elements of a web page, which is supported by most major browsers. Tests are created by viewing the HTML source, using Watir methods in IRB, or with DOM inspection tools to examine the structure of pages.
How to Interpret Trends in the Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart.pdfChart Kalyan
A Mix Chart displays historical data of numbers in a graphical or tabular form. The Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart specifically shows the results of a sequence of numbers over different periods.
[OReilly Superstream] Occupy the Space: A grassroots guide to engineering (an...Jason Yip
The typical problem in product engineering is not bad strategy, so much as “no strategy”. This leads to confusion, lack of motivation, and incoherent action. The next time you look for a strategy and find an empty space, instead of waiting for it to be filled, I will show you how to fill it in yourself. If you’re wrong, it forces a correction. If you’re right, it helps create focus. I’ll share how I’ve approached this in the past, both what works and lessons for what didn’t work so well.
What is an RPA CoE? Session 1 – CoE VisionDianaGray10
In the first session, we will review the organization's vision and how this has an impact on the COE Structure.
Topics covered:
• The role of a steering committee
• How do the organization’s priorities determine CoE Structure?
Speaker:
Chris Bolin, Senior Intelligent Automation Architect Anika Systems
Dandelion Hashtable: beyond billion requests per second on a commodity serverAntonios Katsarakis
This slide deck presents DLHT, a concurrent in-memory hashtable. Despite efforts to optimize hashtables, that go as far as sacrificing core functionality, state-of-the-art designs still incur multiple memory accesses per request and block request processing in three cases. First, most hashtables block while waiting for data to be retrieved from memory. Second, open-addressing designs, which represent the current state-of-the-art, either cannot free index slots on deletes or must block all requests to do so. Third, index resizes block every request until all objects are copied to the new index. Defying folklore wisdom, DLHT forgoes open-addressing and adopts a fully-featured and memory-aware closed-addressing design based on bounded cache-line-chaining. This design offers lock-free index operations and deletes that free slots instantly, (2) completes most requests with a single memory access, (3) utilizes software prefetching to hide memory latencies, and (4) employs a novel non-blocking and parallel resizing. In a commodity server and a memory-resident workload, DLHT surpasses 1.6B requests per second and provides 3.5x (12x) the throughput of the state-of-the-art closed-addressing (open-addressing) resizable hashtable on Gets (Deletes).
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.
Have you ever been confused by the myriad of choices offered by AWS for hosting a website or an API?
Lambda, Elastic Beanstalk, Lightsail, Amplify, S3 (and more!) can each host websites + APIs. But which one should we choose?
Which one is cheapest? Which one is fastest? Which one will scale to meet our needs?
Join me in this session as we dive into each AWS hosting service to determine which one is best for your scenario and explain why!
"Choosing proper type of scaling", Olena SyrotaFwdays
Imagine an IoT processing system that is already quite mature and production-ready and for which client coverage is growing and scaling and performance aspects are life and death questions. The system has Redis, MongoDB, and stream processing based on ksqldb. In this talk, firstly, we will analyze scaling approaches and then select the proper ones for our system.
Programming Foundation Models with DSPy - Meetup SlidesZilliz
Prompting language models is hard, while programming language models is easy. In this talk, I will discuss the state-of-the-art framework DSPy for programming foundation models with its powerful optimizers and runtime constraint system.
Freshworks Rethinks NoSQL for Rapid Scaling & Cost-EfficiencyScyllaDB
Freshworks creates AI-boosted business software that helps employees work more efficiently and effectively. Managing data across multiple RDBMS and NoSQL databases was already a challenge at their current scale. To prepare for 10X growth, they knew it was time to rethink their database strategy. Learn how they architected a solution that would simplify scaling while keeping costs under control.
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.
Fueling AI with Great Data with Airbyte WebinarZilliz
This talk will focus on how to collect data from a variety of sources, leveraging this data for RAG and other GenAI use cases, and finally charting your course to productionalization.
In the realm of cybersecurity, offensive security practices act as a critical shield. By simulating real-world attacks in a controlled environment, these techniques expose vulnerabilities before malicious actors can exploit them. This proactive approach allows manufacturers to identify and fix weaknesses, significantly enhancing system security.
This presentation delves into the development of a system designed to mimic Galileo's Open Service signal using software-defined radio (SDR) technology. We'll begin with a foundational overview of both Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) and the intricacies of digital signal processing.
The presentation culminates in a live demonstration. We'll showcase the manipulation of Galileo's Open Service pilot signal, simulating an attack on various software and hardware systems. This practical demonstration serves to highlight the potential consequences of unaddressed vulnerabilities, emphasizing the importance of offensive security practices in safeguarding critical infrastructure.
Driving Business Innovation: Latest Generative AI Advancements & Success StorySafe Software
Are you ready to revolutionize how you handle data? Join us for a webinar where we’ll bring you up to speed with the latest advancements in Generative AI technology and discover how leveraging FME with tools from giants like Google Gemini, Amazon, and Microsoft OpenAI can supercharge your workflow efficiency.
During the hour, we’ll take you through:
Guest Speaker Segment with Hannah Barrington: Dive into the world of dynamic real estate marketing with Hannah, the Marketing Manager at Workspace Group. Hear firsthand how their team generates engaging descriptions for thousands of office units by integrating diverse data sources—from PDF floorplans to web pages—using FME transformers, like OpenAIVisionConnector and AnthropicVisionConnector. This use case will show you how GenAI can streamline content creation for marketing across the board.
Ollama Use Case: Learn how Scenario Specialist Dmitri Bagh has utilized Ollama within FME to input data, create custom models, and enhance security protocols. This segment will include demos to illustrate the full capabilities of FME in AI-driven processes.
Custom AI Models: Discover how to leverage FME to build personalized AI models using your data. Whether it’s populating a model with local data for added security or integrating public AI tools, find out how FME facilitates a versatile and secure approach to AI.
We’ll wrap up with a live Q&A session where you can engage with our experts on your specific use cases, and learn more about optimizing your data workflows with AI.
This webinar is ideal for professionals seeking to harness the power of AI within their data management systems while ensuring high levels of customization and security. Whether you're a novice or an expert, gain actionable insights and strategies to elevate your data processes. Join us to see how FME and AI can revolutionize how you work with data!
HCL Notes und Domino Lizenzkostenreduzierung in der Welt von DLAUpanagenda
Webinar Recording: https://www.panagenda.com/webinars/hcl-notes-und-domino-lizenzkostenreduzierung-in-der-welt-von-dlau/
DLAU und die Lizenzen nach dem CCB- und CCX-Modell sind für viele in der HCL-Community seit letztem Jahr ein heißes Thema. Als Notes- oder Domino-Kunde haben Sie vielleicht mit unerwartet hohen Benutzerzahlen und Lizenzgebühren zu kämpfen. Sie fragen sich vielleicht, wie diese neue Art der Lizenzierung funktioniert und welchen Nutzen sie Ihnen bringt. Vor allem wollen Sie sicherlich Ihr Budget einhalten und Kosten sparen, wo immer möglich. Das verstehen wir und wir möchten Ihnen dabei helfen!
Wir erklären Ihnen, wie Sie häufige Konfigurationsprobleme lösen können, die dazu führen können, dass mehr Benutzer gezählt werden als nötig, und wie Sie überflüssige oder ungenutzte Konten identifizieren und entfernen können, um Geld zu sparen. Es gibt auch einige Ansätze, die zu unnötigen Ausgaben führen können, z. B. wenn ein Personendokument anstelle eines Mail-Ins für geteilte Mailboxen verwendet wird. Wir zeigen Ihnen solche Fälle und deren Lösungen. Und natürlich erklären wir Ihnen das neue Lizenzmodell.
Nehmen Sie an diesem Webinar teil, bei dem HCL-Ambassador Marc Thomas und Gastredner Franz Walder Ihnen diese neue Welt näherbringen. Es vermittelt Ihnen die Tools und das Know-how, um den Überblick zu bewahren. Sie werden in der Lage sein, Ihre Kosten durch eine optimierte Domino-Konfiguration zu reduzieren und auch in Zukunft gering zu halten.
Diese Themen werden behandelt
- Reduzierung der Lizenzkosten durch Auffinden und Beheben von Fehlkonfigurationen und überflüssigen Konten
- Wie funktionieren CCB- und CCX-Lizenzen wirklich?
- Verstehen des DLAU-Tools und wie man es am besten nutzt
- Tipps für häufige Problembereiche, wie z. B. Team-Postfächer, Funktions-/Testbenutzer usw.
- Praxisbeispiele und Best Practices zum sofortigen Umsetzen
2. 2
forewordforeword
Goal is just to share PowerPoint ‘tips & tricks’
You can agree or disagree with some statements
It’s just a ‘toolbox’
PowerPoint is just a tool. If content is not good, it cannot help
Objective is just to help you to…
Spend less time on layout & more on content
Make ‘better’ presentations
‘6S’ approach is just my own ‘proposal’…
Unrestricted
comments are welcome !
Jean-Luc
18. 18
center this figure horizontally in < 1 mincenter this figure horizontally in < 1 min
Use shapes here-under
to center the figure
18Unrestricted
19. 19
speedspeed
ctrlctrl AA
ctrlctrl CC
ctrlctrl VV
ctrlctrl ZZ
ctrlctrl YY
ctrlctrl SS
escesc
fnfn
prt scprt sc
f2f2
shiftshift enterenter
+ + = 90% time saved !
Take some time to learn how to use toolbar & short-keys !
19
1st
S
21. 21
what does ‘90% time saved’ mean ?what does ‘90% time saved’ mean ?
10h1h
3h20
1h4010’
20’
Do invest some time to learn how to use ‘toolbar’ & ‘short-keys’ !!!
1 day
10 days
24. 24
colorscolors
Use the ‘right’ colors
Select basic colors (e.g.)
− ‘black’ & ‘white’
− 1 ‘grey’
− 3 to 4 ‘blue’
− 1 ‘color’
Use same colors in entire presentation
EXAMPLE AVOID
24
25. 25
black & white (or colors when printed in ‘grey’)black & white (or colors when printed in ‘grey’)
type
grey level
No difference
when printed
type
grey level
25
26. 26
what’s the difference between these figures ?what’s the difference between these figures ?
A A
26
28. 28
fontsfonts
Fonts type
Use ‘Georgia’, Arial’, ‘Helvetica’, ‘Veranda’ or ‘Calibri’
Use ‘Arial’ if lot of numbers
Use ‘black’ as default & ‘blue’ for ‘level 1 titles’
Font size (standard) : max 20 & min 12
Try to avoid bold, italic & underline
Bullets
Avoid ‘black’ or ‘white’ bullets
Different indentation levels = different bullets
Be coherent !
Always use same approach for font colors, font
size, bullets, etc.
Always use same approach for Majuscules, i.e.
− Either Majuscule at beginning of list
− or no majuscule at beginning of list
level 1 (size 18 /20)
level 2 (size 16 / 18)
− level 3 (size 14 / 16)
• level 4 (14)
level 1 (size 18)
• level 2 (size 16)
• level 3 (size 14)
● level 1 (size 18)
● level 2 (size 16)
● level 3 (size 14)
AVOID
EXAMPLE
28
29. 29
lineslines
¾ pt 2 ¼ ptNo line
¾ pt Solid
2 ¼ pt Solid
¾ pt Dash
2 ¼ pt Dash
No need for other types of lines
Use same line types in entire presentation
29
31. 31
how to resize a shapehow to resize a shape
texttext
texttext
1. Select shape
2. Resize shape with ‘yellow diamond’
3. Find ‘right shape’
31
32. 32
always align & ‘distribute’ shapes in a slidealways align & ‘distribute’ shapes in a slide
texttext
texttext
texttext
texttext
Not OK
texttext
texttext
texttext
texttext
OK
32
33. 33
picturespictures
Using pictures is complex
It’s difficult to find the ‘right’ picture
Presentations with pictures take lot of time
Pictures are only useful if you want to make a ‘show’
Most of the time, you just don’t need pictures for internal presentations but just in case…
Don’t use pictures found on Internet (for professional use)
Only use PowerPoint ‘Clip Arts’ (unless you can access specialized images database)
39. 39
tablestables
Table Row 1 Row 2 Row 3 Row 4
Line 1 xxx xxx xxx xxx
Line 2 xxx xxx xxx xxx
Line 3 xxx xxx xxx xxx
Line 4 xxx xxx xxx xxx
Line 5 xxx xxx xxx xxx
Tables are really a problem in PowerPoint
Try not to use standard ‘table option’ if possible
Prefer to create your own table (with ‘Rectangle’ shapes)
40. 40
insert Excel tables in PowerPointinsert Excel tables in PowerPoint
Prefer to paste Excel tables as pictures in PowerPoint
• Select Table in Excel
• Press ‘SHIFT’ & select ‘Copy Picture…’ in ‘Edit’ menu
• Use standard parameters by default
• Go to PowerPoint
• Paste Table (CTRL+V)
1 2 3
If possible, better to create
own table in PowerPoint
41. 41
Paste Excel charts as pictures in PowerPoint
1. Check that font size in graph is > 10 pt
2. Select graph in Excel
3. Press ‘SHIFT’ & select ‘Copy Picture…’ in ‘Edit’ menu
4. Use standard parameters by default
5. Go to PowerPoint
6. Paste graph (CTRL+V)
insert Excel charts in PowerPointinsert Excel charts in PowerPoint
2 3 4
42. 42
need to insert > 1 Excel chart in PowerPoint ?need to insert > 1 Excel chart in PowerPoint ?
Chart
0
2
4
6
8
10
Row 1 Row 2 Row 3 Row 4 Row 5 Row 6 Row 7 Row 8 Row 9 Row...
Chart
0
2
4
6
8
10
Row 1 Row 2 Row 3 Row 4 Row 5 Row 6 Row 7 Row 8 Row 9 Row...
Not enough space on the
slide, isn’t it ?
43. 43
so you’ve just ‘re-sized’ the chartsso you’ve just ‘re-sized’ the charts
Are you sure it’s still possible to read them ?
Chart
0
2
4
6
8
10
Row 1 Row 2 Row 3 Row 4 Row 5 Row 6 Row 7 Row 8 Row 9 Row...
Chart
0
2
4
6
8
10
Row 1 Row 2 Row 3 Row 4 Row 5 Row 6 Row 7 Row 8 Row 9 Row...
47. 47
why not to use animations ?why not to use animations ?
1. Animations = lot of time unless good PowerPoint skills
2. Animations = problems with mouse during presentation (Murphy’s law I)
3. Animations = PC & mouse far from you during presentation (Murphy’s law II)
4. Animations = ‘show’, not ‘facts’
Avoid animations when possible !
51. 51
avoid titles having more than 1 line because it’s
difficult to read them & because it will break the
‘uniformity’ of your presentation
avoid titles having more than 1 line because it’s
difficult to read them & because it will break the
‘uniformity’ of your presentation
52. 5252
Only exception = titles + sub-titles
(no majuscule for titles & Majuscule for sub-titles)
titles & sub-titles
Sub-title = summary of slide in 1 sentence
titles & sub-titles
Sub-title = summary of slide in 1 sentence
53. 53
always use same font size & type for titlesalways use same font size & type for titles
54. 54
slide title must reflect slide content !slide title must reflect slide content !
Always check that slide title really reflects slide content !
55. 55
make your ‘own’ bodymake your ‘own’ body
When you creare a new slide…
• Create your own ‘boby’ = ‘rectangle’ with following attibutes
− ‘Colors & Lines‘
• color = ‘NoFill’
• line = ‘No line’
− ‘Text Box’
• ‘Text anchor Point’ = Top
• ‘Internal margins’ (left, right, top, bottom) = 0,1’ or 0,05’’
• ‘Word wrap text in Autoshape’ checked
• No other option ‘checked’
• Adapt margins !
Never use standard ‘Title and Text’ template
56. 56
bodybody
Avoid very long text in the body of your presentation especially if it will be projected to a
large audience. Use ‘Increase Paragraph Spacing’ command to make the text more
readable. Be sure to adapt the text indentation when you go to a new line. Text must
always be aligned. Be as simple as possible.
Avoid very long text in the body of your presentation especially if it will be projected to a
large audience. Use ‘Increase Paragraph Spacing’ command to make the text more readable.
Be sure to adapt the text indentation when you go to a new line. Text must always be
aligned. Be as simple as possible
• Avoid very long text
• Use to make text more readable
• Text must always be aligned
• Be as simple as possible
57. 57
simplicitysimplicity
The goals of this project if to identify the possible areas of improvement for the
development of a new approach for the definition and the revision of the new
processes that will be launched in the future and to define the impacts of this
new approach on the current structure of our company.
Goals
Identify improvements for definition & revision of new processes
Define impacts on current company structure
Keep it simple !
• Be as simple as possible : go directly to the point
• Avoid articles (the, a, …) ; use ‘&’ instead of ‘and’
• Never > 2 lines in one paragraph (except for executive summary)
2nd
S
58. 58
always check if slide is readable when printedalways check if slide is readable when printed
remember this ?
People usually print
(business)
presentations
59. 59
Find at least 7 ‘mistakes’ in this slideFind at least 7 ‘mistakes’ in this slide
Text
Text
Text
Text
Text
• any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
any text
any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
• any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
• any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
• any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
60. 60
Find at least 7 ‘mistakes’ in this slideFind at least 7 ‘mistakes’ in this slide
Text
Text
Text
Text
Text
• any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
any text
any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
• any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
• any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
• any text any text any text any text
any text any text any text any text
2. Different spacing2. Different spacing
1. Font <> Standard font1. Font <> Standard font
3. Slide limits
not respected
3. Slide limits
not respected
5. ‘White’ bullet5. ‘White’ bullet
4. Text not aligned4. Text not aligned
6. Shape not resized6. Shape not resized
7. Text in bold, italic, not standard font, same
color as in other shapes, > 2 lines, …
7. Text in bold, italic, not standard font, same
color as in other shapes, > 2 lines, …
61. 61
you want a cool slide layout ?you want a cool slide layout ?
62. 62
layout
Cool layout but few colors available for text
layout
Cool layout but few colors available for text
69. 69
visualize presentationvisualize presentation
1. Take a ‘A4’ sheet of paper
2. Draw 10 ‘rectangles’ (= if ’10’ slides)
3. Write ‘1. Introduction’ in 1st
rectangle
4. Write ’10 Conclusions’ in last rectangle
5. Write just one idea on remaining slides
6. Make a ‘story’ with coherent story line
1
10
Introduction
Conclusions
Always visualize your presentation
70. 70
storystory
A presentation is a STORY
You have to make a ‘scenario’ with
1. STRONG start (attract attention)
2. Coherent story line (no flash-back)
3. ACTION !!! (keep public awake)
4. Suspense & surprises (retain interest)
5. Happy end ! (of course…)
Good presentation needs good ‘Story’
6th
S
71. 71
6S PowerPoint Summary6S PowerPoint Summary
Speed customized toolbar & short-keys
Simplicity simplify everything
Scope think about context
Schedule always respect timing
Structure 1 slide = 1 idea
Story make your scenario
73. 73
how to ‘recover’ a color if you’re lucky ?how to ‘recover’ a color if you’re lucky ?
Solution #1 (= when you’re lucky)
1. Select a figure having the color you want
2. Check if color in ‘Fill Color’ palette
3. If color is in ‘Fill Color’ palette, just select the color
74. 74
Solution #2 (= when you’re not lucky)
1. Select a figure having the color you want
2. Check if color in ‘Fill Color’ palette
3. If color is not in ‘Fill Color’ palette, click on ‘More Fill Color’
4. Double click on ‘New’. Now the color is in ‘Fill Color’ palette
how to ‘recover’ a color if you’re not lucky ?how to ‘recover’ a color if you’re not lucky ?
81. 81
make this figure in < 5 minmake this figure in < 5 min
5’’
5’’
Tip :
Use Excel
82. 82
make this figure in < 5 minmake this figure in < 5 min
Tip :
Use Paint
any spacing
83. 83
template : table of contenttemplate : table of content
1
2
3
4
5
Chapter 1 title
• Description of chapter 1
Chapter 2 title
• Description of chapter 2
Chapter 3 title
• Description of chapter 3
Chapter 4 title
• Description of chapter 4
Chapter 5 title
• Description of chapter 5
84. 84
template : table of contenttemplate : table of content
Chapter 1 title
Chapter 2 title
Chapter 3 title
Chapter 4 title
Chapter 5 title
90. 90
template : 10 slides for Senior Managementtemplate : 10 slides for Senior Management
Structure
- Title
- Executive summary
- Agenda
Scope
Status
Issue(s)
Solution(s)
Requirements / Developments needed
Risks & opportunities
Financials / Figures
What if NO GO / -30% investments / GO
Planning & next steps
Decisions needed
- Backup
Items on Title slide
Date
(presentation to xxx)
Unrestricted / Internal Use Only / Confidential
(Name) / Department / (Company)
For information / For decision / For discussion
Mandatory items on all slides
Slide number
Unrestricted / Internal Use Only / Confidential / …
20 min presentation
with executive summary