Thursday, July 17, 2008

Presentations


This week on National Geographic is Earth: The Biography (A-). The series is hosted by Ian Stewart (the host of "Hot Rocks") who is quirky yet interesting. I really like this series because it is somewhat filmed like Planet Earth (maybe not as good) but it also contains some of the most recent scientific data and insights that are missing in a lot of the older specials still on TV.

So far the most interesting part for me was during the Atmosphere show. I have never considered skydiving because I think it would be a minute of pure terror, however I never knew that at the start of the space program around ~1960 someone jumped out of a special balloon 90 miles above the earth. It took them 15 minutes to fall back to the ground and they were so high that when they jumped there was no wind resistance of any kind blowing on them until they reentered the lower layers of the atmosphere.

The series has reminded me of the importance of a good presentation. More impressive to me than the HD images has been the sequence of the presentation. If you had to do 1 hr on Ice, what topics would you cover and how would you flow between them?

The book Made to Stick should be required reading before being able to install Power Point at work. I would grade the avg presentation at work to be a D with some of the better ones a C or C+. It does take a lot of time to create a good presentation and it makes some of the best, like An Inconvenient Truth, so interesting to watch.

Here is a great presentation on 3rd world myths.

3 comments:

Dale said...

What, you don't find 5 slides with 10 bullet points each talking about the engineering equity triangle interesting?

I remember talking to an intern, who had just gone through a half day of the company trying to recruit them to join them full time, saying that the day was really long and the stuff they said was really abstract. This company so much violates the "C" in the Made to Stick model (C = Concrete) with all of our strategies and what not.

Well time for me to go to bed to increase shareholder value tomorrow.

Karen said...

thank you dale, for being well-rested and helping our retirement fund.

as a professor i use powerpoint FREQUENTLY - partially to keep my place and remind of of all the subjects i wanted to cover, and partially because i'm a visual learner myself and benefit from seeing as well as hearing a point being made.

SO, i was very interested in seeing what you considered a good presentation. Problem is - i don't know how to do all that live action video stuff... perhaps that's not power point running it?

Anonymous said...

I'm sure it wasn't Power Point. My comments are more on the style than technology. I could very easily see that presentation as a list of reasons the 3rd world is changing...#1 GDP gap decreasing...

Utilizing Power Point instead of an overhead for school I see as different than how you communicate an idea you want people to remember.

Dave