Instead of downgrading zoom to the Intel version, one solution is to download and install the free streaming software OBS. OBS recognizes the EOS Webcam Utility camera readily, and when its Virtual Camera is started, zoom (as well as several other apps on MacOS) will see OBS Virtual Camera as a new video feed.
The cloud SDK is designed to provide on-demand patch updates, and it does not support exact versions. You will always get the latest patch version within the major version specified in the version parameter of zoomSdk.config. In other words, if you supplied an exact version like 0.16.1, you will get the latest patch within the 0.16 major version.
The Zoom Apps SDK relies on a token that is generated and used internally by the Zoom client to authorize API calls on behalf of the app. This token is bound to the openURL that you provide when you call zoomSdk.config. If your URL changes, your configuration will be invalidated, and you will need to call zoomSdk.config with the new URL again.
Users viewing shared content can more easily adjust their current view by using the Cmd + track wheel (macOS and Linux) or Alt + track wheel (Windows) shortcut with a mouse or pinch-to-zoom with a trackpad.
A summary zoom is like a landing page where you can see the pieces of your presentation all at once. When you're presenting, you can use the zoom to go from one place in your presentation to another in any order you like. You can get creative, skip ahead, or revisit pieces of your slide show without interrupting the flow of your presentation.
Select slides you want to include in your summary zoom. These become the first slides of your summary zoom sections. To learn more about using sections in PowerPoint, see Organize your PowerPoint slides into sections.
Once you've selected all the slides you want to use for your summary zoom, select Insert. Your summary zoom is created, and it appears as a new slide just before the first slide you included in your summary zoom.
A slide zoom can help you make your presentation more dynamic, allowing you to navigate freely between slides in any order you choose without interrupting the flow of your presentation. They're a good option for shorter presentations without lots of sections, but you can use slide zooms for lots of different presentation scenarios.
A section zoom is a link to a section already in your presentation. You can use them to go back to sections you want to really emphasize, or to highlight how certain pieces of your presentation connect. To learn more about using sections in PowerPoint, see Organize your PowerPoint slides into sections.
If you want to return to the zoom slide after viewing sections or slides in your summary, slide, or section zoom, make sure the Return to Zoom check box is selected. If you want to move on to the next slide after viewing part of your zoom, uncheck it.
(If you're working with a summary zoom or a section zoom, you'll return to the zoom slide by default when you're presenting after going to the section. If you're using a slide zoom, you'll move on to the next slide by default after viewing your slide zoom.)
Another way you can change the look of your zoom is by choosing to adopt the background of the slide where your zoom lives to make the zoom almost indistinguishable from the main canvas while you present. Select Zoom Background to make your summary, section, or slide zooms blend in to their home slide.
By default, your zooms will use the zoom transition when you present, which is what helps make the zooms feel so lively. However, if you don't want to use the zoom transition, or if you want to change the duration of the transition, you can do so.
D3v4 saw a substantial reworking of D3 as compared with v3, but the zoom behavior saw extensive changes relative to rest of the library. Instead of the zoom behavior modifying scales, the zoom event's transform have rescale methods that can be passed a scale. The rescale methods return a new scale with the appropriate updated domain for any given zoom (for either a horizontal or vertical scale), eg:
Why not just rescale the original scale and use this with the axis? Because the zoom state is relative to its starting state (k: 1, x:0, y:0) we want to always use the original scale when rescaling, so we need to preserve the original scale. See here for more on that.
For all versions of d3 after v4 the zoom behavior does not modify scales. Instead the zoom event transform property provides methods to rescale x and y scales, these methods return the new rescaled scales to provide to axis generators.
I used to happily use the wheel mouse to zoom but, after upgrading to the Mac Magic mouse (using only finger slide movement to scroll and pan) I can no longer hold Ctrl and roll the mouse to zoom (driving me crazy) and I can't see a useful keyboard shortcut and the zoom slider bar in the lower right of the Word screen isn't practical (in my experience). Is there any way to zoom in on the Mac Version of Microsoft Word 2011 without resorting to using a menu?
You don't have to do any of that. Go to System Preferences on a Mac. Go to Accessibility. Go to the Zoom tab. Go the tic box for Use scroll gesture with modifier keys to zoom: choose control on the drop down menu and you get your old favorite feature back. Now when you hold down control and use the scroll wheel you will be zooming in and out magnification-wise with your monitor. Easy!
Like I imagine many of you, I'm spending a lot of my time on Zoom nowadays. However I have an annoying issue where Zoom only shares the top left quarter of my screen - is anybody else having this issue/any ideas on how to debug? I'm on 5.6.13, GNOME on Wayland, zoom version 5.0.413237.0524-1 from AUR and have had this issue for as long as I've used Zoom (only started as of the quarantine). FWIW I've never had this issue with any other videoconferencing app - Google Hangouts and Meet screenshare normally - but unfortunately my job uses Zoom exclusively Any thoughts are appreciated!
ZoomIt is a screen zoom, annotation, and recording tool for technical presentationsand demos. You can also use ZoomIt to snip screenshots to the clipboard or to a file.ZoomIt runs unobtrusively in the tray and activates with customizablehotkeys to zoom in on an area of the screen, move around while zoomed, and draw onthe zoomed image. I wrote ZoomIt to fit my specific needs and use it in all mypresentations.
The first time you run ZoomIt it presents a configuration dialog thatdescribes ZoomIt's behavior, let's you specify alternate hotkeys forzooming and for entering drawing mode without zooming, and customize thedrawing pen color and size. I use the draw-without-zoom option toannotate the screen at its native resolution, for example. ZoomIt alsoincludes a break timer feature that remains active even when you tabaway from the timer window and allows you to return to the timer windowby clicking on the ZoomIt tray icon.
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