June 1, 2009
by Meryl Evans | One Comment
If you don’t have a Tablet PC to write directly on your slides during a BBP presentation, you can always use a whiteboard as a companion to your screen. But if you want even more flexibility to write from other places in the room, or to let your audience write on the screen, try Papershow,… keep reading
May 25, 2009
by Meryl Evans | No Comments
If you don’t have a Tablet PC, it can be tough to make full use of BBP to sketch your slides or write directly on your screen during a presentation.
If that’s the case, you may want to try Anoto penPresenter, which comes with a digital pen and special paper to help you get started drawing… keep reading
September 24, 2008
by Meryl Evans | 5 Comments
Presentations support your narration, so they can’t always tell the story without you. Even a superb Beyond Bullet Points presentation needs you.
But when you can’t be there in person, you may want or need to transcribe your narration of a presentation into a script or add it to the notes pages for a number of reasons:
Others will teach… keep reading
September 1, 2008
by Meryl Evans | No Comments
We’ve reviewed editable maps from BJDesign.com and have another for you to look at from PresentationMall. Both companies offer high quality editable maps. The main difference is their collections. One might have one thing you need while the other has something else you could use.
Many free maps you can find online aren’t editable or come… keep reading
August 25, 2008
by Meryl Evans | No Comments
PowerPoint files can turn into a monstrosity. Forget about emailing the big ones to someone. They also add bulge to a hard drive (or server). While you can do lots of tricks to shrink the files yourself, you and your organization may not have the luxury to do that. With many online services letting you… keep reading
June 10, 2008
by Meryl Evans | One Comment
Looking for ways to share your presentations with colleagues, friends or the world at large?
There are many online presentation services that have popping up lately that may just fit the bill.
Most of these services allow you to import PowerPoint (.ppt), OpenOffice (.odf), and Adobe Acrobat (.pdf) files. They also provide code to let you embed presentations… keep reading
July 10, 2006
by Cliff Atkinson | 5 Comments