Discusses the circulating makerspace kits created by the North Central Kansas Library System to allow libraries to easily present maker and STEM programs.
A Perfect Storm: Ubiquity and Social ScienceJohn Thomas
A keynote talk at a Ubicomp 2014 workshop. This talk looks at the opportunities for social science due to ubiquitous computing and offers some techniques for problem finding, problem formulation and problem reframing.
Rosemary King - Playing to Learn: How Understanding the Function That Play Ha...Turing Fest
As product managers, we are constantly learning. Learning about new technologies, new ways of structuring experiences, new ways of presenting information. We are constantly challenging ourselves to questions our assumptions about our users, our products, the way that we do things. How can PMs optimize their professional development? How can organizations understand how to better support their people? The way we learn originates in the way we play. For decades cognitive scientists have studied how play develops our minds and the way we interact with the world. Understanding the origins our learning process can help us understand how to continue the process as adults. This talk will cover the concept of play as cognitive developer, examine how great minds have used playful thinking to innovate new concepts and offer thoughts on how organizations can apply these lessons to their team cultures to create space.
To be good user experience folks, we need to crack open some psych 101 textbooks, learn what motivates people and then bake these ideas into our designs.
Discusses the circulating makerspace kits created by the North Central Kansas Library System to allow libraries to easily present maker and STEM programs.
A Perfect Storm: Ubiquity and Social ScienceJohn Thomas
A keynote talk at a Ubicomp 2014 workshop. This talk looks at the opportunities for social science due to ubiquitous computing and offers some techniques for problem finding, problem formulation and problem reframing.
Rosemary King - Playing to Learn: How Understanding the Function That Play Ha...Turing Fest
As product managers, we are constantly learning. Learning about new technologies, new ways of structuring experiences, new ways of presenting information. We are constantly challenging ourselves to questions our assumptions about our users, our products, the way that we do things. How can PMs optimize their professional development? How can organizations understand how to better support their people? The way we learn originates in the way we play. For decades cognitive scientists have studied how play develops our minds and the way we interact with the world. Understanding the origins our learning process can help us understand how to continue the process as adults. This talk will cover the concept of play as cognitive developer, examine how great minds have used playful thinking to innovate new concepts and offer thoughts on how organizations can apply these lessons to their team cultures to create space.
To be good user experience folks, we need to crack open some psych 101 textbooks, learn what motivates people and then bake these ideas into our designs.
To Bore No More: Designing & Delivering Presentations That Engage Your AudienceSarah Halstead
This slide show supports a workshop presented in March 2010 at the Fulfilling the Promise Conference in Oconomowoc, WI. While this was a 75 minute workshop, it can easily be expanded to 2 hours, half day or full day presentations.
PLEASE NOTE: This presentation was originally titled "Bore No More." Five months AFTER this presentation was delivered and uploaded, the phrase "Bore No More" was trademarked by Jonathan Petz of Powell, OH. The title has been changed in order to comply with federal trademark rules.
Sharing all of the info gathered around workshops, speaker panels, and networking events at South by Southwest Interactive. This will include topics from iPad to UX to Social Media to Gaming to the next big things.
"Telling A Good Story: Getting from Idea, to Pitch, to Public," was presented by Generation PRX Director Jones Franzel at the 2012 NYC Digital Waves Youth Media Festival. Learn more at htttp://generation.prx.org
Want to tinker with new technology at your library but don’t quite know where to start? The Maker Space Petting Zoo provides a 30 minutes overview of maker culture in libraries, followed by an hour of hands on experience with a variety of maker technology, including robots. You’ll complete this session with some hands-on experience that you can take back to your library, along with project ideas, to develop your own makerspace.
Made to Stick: Delivering effective scientific presentations and postersSteve Lee
This professional development workshop was presented for the GradPathways program at UC Davis for grad students and postdocs in the STEM disciplines in Oct 2016.
Immerse, Imagine, Invent, Articulate: A framework for disruptive innovationPaulJervisHeath
What new product or service could you invent that would completely change your customers’ lives? How could you disrupt your entire sector?
This practical workshop takes you through an innovation process, helping you to identify the clichés that exist in your sector and giving you the tools and time to redefine them. The workshop provides techniques to disrupt those clichés, generate genuine customer insights, turn opportunities into ideas through proven ideation methods, create a coherent concept and then articulate that concept.
The workshop shows you how to realise a new product or service through a lean process of prototyping and iteration and we discuss case studies each step of the way.
Find out why focus groups are not design research. Find out why the average brainstorm gives ideation a bad name and find out how to make your own innovation processes have tangible business outcomes.
This workshop was ran at UX Cambridge in September 2013 and will be running again at the J. Boye conference in Århus, Denmark in November 2013.
Tweaked version of Managing for Change , originally presented at Ikaroa Professional Development Weekend 2010. This presentation was given to Horowhenua staff in April 2011 to kick off the development of personal development plans in preparation for a 'service rethink' for Te Takere, the new culture and community centre being built in Levin.
Design Thinking and Public Sector Innovation Ben Weinlick
Ben Weinlick of Think Jar Collective gave a keynote for the Canada Conference Board Public Sector Innovation conference on how human centered design thinking can be a game changer for service and system innovation in the public and social sectors.
To Bore No More: Designing & Delivering Presentations That Engage Your AudienceSarah Halstead
This slide show supports a workshop presented in March 2010 at the Fulfilling the Promise Conference in Oconomowoc, WI. While this was a 75 minute workshop, it can easily be expanded to 2 hours, half day or full day presentations.
PLEASE NOTE: This presentation was originally titled "Bore No More." Five months AFTER this presentation was delivered and uploaded, the phrase "Bore No More" was trademarked by Jonathan Petz of Powell, OH. The title has been changed in order to comply with federal trademark rules.
Sharing all of the info gathered around workshops, speaker panels, and networking events at South by Southwest Interactive. This will include topics from iPad to UX to Social Media to Gaming to the next big things.
"Telling A Good Story: Getting from Idea, to Pitch, to Public," was presented by Generation PRX Director Jones Franzel at the 2012 NYC Digital Waves Youth Media Festival. Learn more at htttp://generation.prx.org
Want to tinker with new technology at your library but don’t quite know where to start? The Maker Space Petting Zoo provides a 30 minutes overview of maker culture in libraries, followed by an hour of hands on experience with a variety of maker technology, including robots. You’ll complete this session with some hands-on experience that you can take back to your library, along with project ideas, to develop your own makerspace.
Made to Stick: Delivering effective scientific presentations and postersSteve Lee
This professional development workshop was presented for the GradPathways program at UC Davis for grad students and postdocs in the STEM disciplines in Oct 2016.
Immerse, Imagine, Invent, Articulate: A framework for disruptive innovationPaulJervisHeath
What new product or service could you invent that would completely change your customers’ lives? How could you disrupt your entire sector?
This practical workshop takes you through an innovation process, helping you to identify the clichés that exist in your sector and giving you the tools and time to redefine them. The workshop provides techniques to disrupt those clichés, generate genuine customer insights, turn opportunities into ideas through proven ideation methods, create a coherent concept and then articulate that concept.
The workshop shows you how to realise a new product or service through a lean process of prototyping and iteration and we discuss case studies each step of the way.
Find out why focus groups are not design research. Find out why the average brainstorm gives ideation a bad name and find out how to make your own innovation processes have tangible business outcomes.
This workshop was ran at UX Cambridge in September 2013 and will be running again at the J. Boye conference in Århus, Denmark in November 2013.
Tweaked version of Managing for Change , originally presented at Ikaroa Professional Development Weekend 2010. This presentation was given to Horowhenua staff in April 2011 to kick off the development of personal development plans in preparation for a 'service rethink' for Te Takere, the new culture and community centre being built in Levin.
Design Thinking and Public Sector Innovation Ben Weinlick
Ben Weinlick of Think Jar Collective gave a keynote for the Canada Conference Board Public Sector Innovation conference on how human centered design thinking can be a game changer for service and system innovation in the public and social sectors.
Similar to To Bore No More (2018 presentation) (20)
Sharpen existing tools or get a new toolbox? Contemporary cluster initiatives...Orkestra
UIIN Conference, Madrid, 27-29 May 2024
James Wilson, Orkestra and Deusto Business School
Emily Wise, Lund University
Madeline Smith, The Glasgow School of Art
Have you ever wondered how search works while visiting an e-commerce site, internal website, or searching through other types of online resources? Look no further than this informative session on the ways that taxonomies help end-users navigate the internet! Hear from taxonomists and other information professionals who have first-hand experience creating and working with taxonomies that aid in navigation, search, and discovery across a range of disciplines.
Acorn Recovery: Restore IT infra within minutesIP ServerOne
Introducing Acorn Recovery as a Service, a simple, fast, and secure managed disaster recovery (DRaaS) by IP ServerOne. A DR solution that helps restore your IT infra within minutes.
This presentation by Morris Kleiner (University of Minnesota), was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found out at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
0x01 - Newton's Third Law: Static vs. Dynamic AbusersOWASP Beja
f you offer a service on the web, odds are that someone will abuse it. Be it an API, a SaaS, a PaaS, or even a static website, someone somewhere will try to figure out a way to use it to their own needs. In this talk we'll compare measures that are effective against static attackers and how to battle a dynamic attacker who adapts to your counter-measures.
About the Speaker
===============
Diogo Sousa, Engineering Manager @ Canonical
An opinionated individual with an interest in cryptography and its intersection with secure software development.
30. 30
Left -Brained Slides
• People can’t listen and read effectively at the same time.
• Watching presenters read directly from their slides is really,
really boring.
• Slide after slide of bulleted text puts people to sleep.
• Garr Reynolds calls this “Death By PowerPoint.”
• Chances are good that you’ve experienced this at some point
in the past.
• (If you’ve read ahead to the end of this slide before I stop
reading it, raise your hand RIGHT NOW and keep it up in the
air until those around you also raise their hands. )
43. „People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.“ - Mary Angelou„People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.“ - Mary Angelou
“People will forget what you said, people will
forget what you did, but people will never
forget how you made them feel.” - Mary Angelou
„People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.“ - Mary Angelou„People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.“ - Mary Angelou
58. The Role of Family and Community in
Mentoring Alienated Youth in the
American Midwest
• Blended family
• Economically depressed
• Accompanied by other challenged and
homeless adults
• Person of color
• Struggles with addiction…
76. What Is Your Energy Synergy?
Points to remember:
What is your magnetic personality ____________?
You may wish you could just wave your magic wand,
but there is a ____________ involved.
•____________ing
•____________ing
•____________ing
•____________ing
Handouts
80. Ready, Set, PLAN!
Know your audience
Design your message to
engage brains and memory
Erase old habits and put the
power back in PowerPoint
Guide your viewer’s
attention
82. Tips and Tricks
Helpful words to SAY
Use a remote
Magic keys to unlock
power
Freebies and toys
Practice
Sweat the small stuff
(including handouts)
84. References & Photo Sources
Books to enhance your presentations:
• Presentation Zen by Garr Reynolds
• Why Bad Presentations Happen to Good Causes by Andy Goodman & Cause Communications
• Brain Rules by John Medina
• The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs: How to be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience by Carmine Gallo
• Beyond Bullet Points by Cliff Atkinson
• Visual Literacy: Learn to See, See to Learn by Lynell Burkmark
• The Big Book of IceBreakers by Edie West
• Made To Stick by Chip Health and Dan Health
Special thanks to the following for their inspiration and shared resources:
• Don McMillan, comedian, “Life After Death By PowerPoint” ,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ayxfblOyUBY&feature=related
• Scott H. Young, “18 Tips for Killer Presentations”, http://www.lifehack.org/articles/communication/18-tips-for-killer-
presentations.html
• Projector People, “Tips for Presenters”, http://www.projectorpeople.com/resources/presenter-tips.asp#point28
• Kevin Kearns, Kearn’s Advantage, “Top 7 Tips to Becoming a Dynamic Presenter”, http://top7business.com/?id=869
• Alexei Kapterev, “Death By PowerPoint and How To Fight It” http://www.slideshare.net/thecroaker/death-by-powerpoint
• LaDonna Coy, Learning for Change Inc., “Energizing Presentations”, http://www.slideshare.net/ladcoy/energizing-
powerpoint
• Michelle Lentz, “ Cool Tools: Legally Using Web 2.0 Tools to Spice Up Your Training”,
http://www.slideshare.net/writetech/cool-tools-legally-using-web-20-tools-to-spice-up-your-training-presentation
• Stan Skrabut, “Improving Your Powerpoint Presentations” , http://www.slideshare.net/skrabut/improving-your-power-
point-presentations-by-stan-skrabut
• Gail Zack Anderson, “Using Icebreakers” www.applauseinc.net
Photo sources:
• www.istockphoto.com
• www.brainrules.net/mediakit
• http://www.michaelclancy.com/
• www.flickr.com (Creative Commons)
• http://images.google.com (advanced search)
85. This presentation is licensed under CREATIVE COMMONS.
This means you can use it, or parts thereof, as long as appropriate attribution is given
and your resulting product is made available under this same license. The license
prohibits using this presentation for commercial purposes. A list of citations and links is
included for your reference and use. Please cite all photos to the original source.
Suggested Attribution:
Source: Sarah Halstead, Presentation and handouts are available on Slideshare
Feel free to contact me through Slideshare:http://www.slideshare.net/SarahHalstead
or Linked In http://www.linkedin.com/in/sarahhalstead