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Gettysburg address in PowerPointWhere do I find the PPT Gettysburg Address? It was hilarious.
-- Kim Harris (email), June 25, 2001 |
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Response to Gettysburg Address In response to the question "How to make presentations: techniques, handouts, display technologies" Edward Tufte responded: "For a devastating parody of PowerPoint, see Lincoln's Gettysburg Address in PowerPoint, by Peter Norvig (http://www.norvig.com or a mirror site which you can easily track down in Google)." The rest of the answer is good also, and I have found all the questions and answers informative in this series of question threads. -- Rick Barraza (email), June 25, 2001 |
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Peter Norvig now has an animated version of the Gettysburg Address in PowerPoint: http://www.norvig.com/Gettysburg/index.htm with a link at the bottom of the page. Still another way that PowerPoint makes people stupid. -- Edward Tufte, June 19, 2002 |
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As I mentioned to Mr. Tufte yesterday during his wonderful lecture, a friend of mine has started up a PowerPoint competition (between her and another colleague) at Click to Add Title. There are several rounds, each involving a particular style/topic and the goal is to see who can produce the "best" worst example each round. So far, it has been terrifyingly hilarious since I have seen many similar presentations meant in a serious vein. -- Yun Joo Shin (email), July 30, 2002 |
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How to Use PowerPoint Regarding the previous question on how to use PowerPoint in presentations: Might I suggest people follow the example of a mentor of mine, Dr. Craig Feied, Director of the National Center for Emergency Medicine Informatics. Dr. Feied uses only pictures in his PowerPoint presentations and only the *highest* resolution pictures he can find. *No words*. No bullet points. No titles. He shows a new picture about every 10-15 seconds. Each picture further elaborates the point which he is making. The speed of picture change is slower than TV commercials, but much faster than the yawn inducing speed of 2-3 minutes per slide typically taught. His lectures are enthralling and I have not used a bullet point since. -- Michael Gillam, MD (email), March 3, 2004 |
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![]() -- Irwin Anolik (email), February 10, 2005 |
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