try to include a good mix of defining a problem, discussing the
solutions (not just rest), whilst discussing show slides with diagrams
to illustrate what your saying (with images rather than txt on
screen), then do a hello world example to capture interest early...
Then I would pull up a slide to show the topics you plan to cover, I.e
security, blah blah
some people are visual learners, some need code, some prefer text,
some prefer coding at the same time.... Just concentrate on a
consistent style that's clean, delivers the points as clearly as
possible.
I am thinking about doing some online webinars myself, so I would be
interested in how you get on, good luck with the interview :-)
one obvious thing, watch out for 'erm's and regular filler words that
can be really annoying to a listener.
Rob
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On Dec 22, 7:09 pm, Tony Childs <alcdot...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Thanks Rob. I was waiting to respond until I'd heard from a few people, but
> it looks like the Netbeans vs. Eclipse is taking all the bandwidth. :)
> I'll let you know how it goes.
>
> > javaposse+...@googlegroups.com<javaposse%2Bunsu...@googlegroups.com>
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Since you're taking your presentation pretty seriously, you could
practice what you'll say for 4 or 5 slides and time yourself. This
should give you a ballpark figure of how long it takes you to discuss
one of your own slides.
Also check out Slideshare to get a feel for interesting slide decks.
http://www.slideshare.net/search/slideshow?lang=en&q=java&sort=views
On Dec 29, 11:01 pm, Tony Childs <alcdot...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Great advice. Thanks. Another question occurred to me today. Is there a
> good method (aside from practice) to target a certain timeframe in which to
> fit a presentation? My intuition tells me that this might not lend itself
> to generalization since there are plenty of factors that might affect it
> (e.g. topic complexity, speaker's tempo, presence of demos, etc). However,
> I'd be interested if anyone has any rules of thumb that you use to turn X
> amount of content (chapters, sections, etc) into a presentation of Y
> minutes.
>
> Thanks again for the advice so far.
>
> On Sat, Dec 26, 2009 at 6:14 PM, Joe Sondow <joeson...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > One way to learn how to do technical talks is to watch people do them
> > and try to emulate the parts you like. Seeing them live at meetups is
> > preferable. However if you're in a hurry there are many tech talks
> > with slides posted on youtube and other sites, including the 5-minute
> > lightning talks of the Java Posse Roundup at
> >http://www.youtube.com/javaposse
>
> > --
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The talk was on general Agile approaches outside of technology, and a central
point of the talk focussed on the pyramid technique. Perhaps if you're worried
about timing you may want to bring an aspect of that into your talk. The idea
being that the talk is ordered in most to least important points. That way if
you run out of time, you have already been over the focal points of your talk,
if you have extra time you could always have summary slides to reiterate or
take questions.
You may find it more fruitful to think in terms of making sure you get the
important parts in, rather fitting everything into X minutes. But as I said,
this was advice I heard, which I haven't had a chance to try.
Hope it all goes well for you.
~ Graham
You have to decide if your slides will just simply emphasis your
words... or can they exist without your words. If so, they will be a
lot more detailed, and that can take away from your presentation.
The best presentations have a bit of passion and opinion in them.
And think about the narrative... what's story are you trying to tell.
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Rob
On Dec 30, 9:27 am, Joe Sondow <joeson...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I've seen time-constrained presenters use their iphone clock's
> countdown program on a desk so they have a timer to glance at while
> they talk. If the slides are numbered you can probably see how well
> you're doing on time as you move through them. If good questions eat
> up time, be willing to skip a few unimportant slides in the middle of
> the talk. It's better than skipping all the slides at the end.
>
> Since you're taking your presentation pretty seriously, you could
> practice what you'll say for 4 or 5 slides and time yourself. This
> should give you a ballpark figure of how long it takes you to discuss
> one of your own slides.
>
> Also check out Slideshare to get a feel for interesting slide decks.http://www.slideshare.net/search/slideshow?lang=en&q=java&sort=views
>
> On Dec 29, 11:01 pm, Tony Childs <alcdot...@gmail.com> wrote:> Great advice. Thanks. Another question occurred to me today. Is there a
> > good method (aside from practice) to target a certain timeframe in which to
> > fit a presentation? My intuition tells me that this might not lend itself
> > to generalization since there are plenty of factors that might affect it
> > (e.g. topic complexity, speaker's tempo, presence of demos, etc). However,
> > I'd be interested if anyone has any rules of thumb that you use to turn X
> > amount of content (chapters, sections, etc) into a presentation of Y
> > minutes.
>
> > Thanks again for the advice so far.
>
> > On Sat, Dec 26, 2009 at 6:14 PM, Joe Sondow <joeson...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > One way to learn how to do technical talks is to watch people do them
> > > and try to emulate the parts you like. Seeing them live at meetups is
> > > preferable. However if you're in a hurry there are many tech talks
> > > with slides posted on youtube and other sites, including the 5-minute
> > > lightning talks of the Java Posse Roundup at
> > >http://www.youtube.com/javaposse
>
> > > --
>
> > > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
> > > "The Java Posse" group.
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> > > To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
> > > javaposse+...@googlegroups.com<javaposse%2Bunsubscribe@googlegroups .com>
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to javaposse+...@googlegroups.com.