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9
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edited Nov 8 '08 at 16:24
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I am planning to give a Technical presentation for a product we are building.
Intended audience is Technical developers. So, most of the time, I will be debugging trough the code in Visual Studio, performance analysis, some architecture review etc.
I have read couple of blogs on font sizes to use, templates to use on Visual Studio, presentation tools, among other very useful tips.
What I am looking specifically for is how to keep the session interesting without making it a dry code walkthrough? How to avoid making people fall asleep? Would be great to hear some stories..
I know ultimately it is upto me but I am certainly willing to give it a try..
Update1: Nice youtube clip on zoomit. Glue Audience To Your Presentation With Zoomit.
Update2: New post from Scott Hanselman after his PDC talk - Tips for Preparing for a Technical Presentation
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8
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edited Nov 4 '08 at 16:36
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I am planning to give a Technical presentation for a product we are building.
Intended audience is Technical developers. So, most of the time, I will be debugging trough the code in Visual Studio, performance analysis, some architecture review etc.
I have read couple of blogs on font sizes to use, templates to use on Visual Studio, presentation tools, among other very useful tips.
What I am looking specifically for is how to keep the session interesting without making it a dry code walkthrough? How to avoid making people fall asleep? Would be great to hear some stories..
I know ultimately it is upto me but I am certainly willing to give it a try..
Update1: Nice youtube clip on zoomit. Glue Audience To Your Presentation With Zoomit.
Update2: New post from hanselman Scott Hanselman after his PDC talk - Tips for Preparing for a Technical Presentation
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Post Made Community Wiki by Community♦
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occurred Nov 4 '08 at 16:30
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7
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edited Nov 4 '08 at 16:30
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I am planning to give a Technical presentation for a product we are building.
Intended audience is Technical developers. So, most of the time, I will be debugging trough the code in Visual Studio, performance analysis, some architecture review etc.
I have read couple of blogs on font sizes to use, templates to use on Visual Studio, presentation tools, among other very useful tips.
What I am looking specifically for is how to keep the session interesting without making it a dry code walkthrough? How to avoid making people fall asleep? Would be great to hear some stories..
I know ultimately it is upto me but I am certainly willing to give it a try..
Update
Update1: Nice youtube clip on zoomit. Glue Audience To Your Presentation With Zoomit.
Update2: New post from hanselman after his PDC talk - Tips for Preparing for a Technical Presentation
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6
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edited Oct 10 '08 at 23:47
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Update: Thank you. I am humbled by all the feedback. Ran out of votes. I am planning to give a Technical presentation for a product we are building.
Intended audience is Technical developers. So, most of the time, I will be debugging trough the code in Visual Studio, performance analysis, some architecture review etc.
I have read couple of blogs on font sizes to use, templates to use on Visual Studio, presentation tools, among other very useful tips.
What I am looking specifically for is how to keep the session interesting without making it a dry code walkthrough? How to avoid making people fall asleep? Would be great to hear some stories..
I know ultimately it is upto me but I am certainly willing to give it a try..
Update: Nice youtube clip on zoomit. Glue Audience To Your Presentation With Zoomit.
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5
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edited Sep 12 '08 at 22:02
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Update: Thank you. I am humbled by all the feedback. Ran out of votes.
I am planning to give a Technical presentation for a product we are building.
Intended audience is Technical developers. So, most of the time, I will be debugging trough the code in Visual Studio, performance analysis, some architecture review etc.
I have read couple of blogs on font sizes to use, templates to use on Visual Studio, presentation tools, among other very useful tips.
What I am looking specifically for is how to keep the session interesting without making it a dry code walkthrough? How to avoid making people fall asleep? Would be great to hear some stories..
I know ultimately it is upto me but I am certainly willing to give it a try..
Update: Nice youtube clip on zoomit. Glue Audience To Your Presentation With Zoomit.
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4
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edited Sep 12 '08 at 20:16
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I am planning to give a Technical presentation for a product we are building.
Intended audience is Technical developers. So, most of the time, I will be debugging trough the code in Visual Studio, performance analysis, some architecture review etc.
I have read couple of blogs on font sizes to use, templates to use on Visual Studio, presentation tools, among other very useful tips.
What I am looking specifically for is how to keep the session interesting without making it a dry code walkthrough? How to avoid making people fall asleep? Would be great to hear some stories..
I know ultimately it is upto me but I am certainly willing to give it a try..
Update: Nice youtube clip on zoomit. Glue Audience To Your Presentation With Zoomit.
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3
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edited Sep 12 '08 at 19:53
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I am planning to give a Technical presentation for a product we are building.
Intended audience is Technical developers. So, most of the time, I will be debugging trough the code in Visual Studio, performance analysis, some architecture review etc.
I have read couple of blogs on font sizes to use, templates to use on Visual Studio, presentation tools, among other very useful tips.
What I am looking specifically for is how to keep the session interesting without making it a dry code walkthrough? How to avoid making people fall asleep? Would be great to hear some stories..
I know ultimately it is upto me but I am certainly willing to give it a try..
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2
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edited Sep 12 '08 at 19:27
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I am planning to give a Technical presentation for a product we are building.
Intended audience is Technical developers. So, most of the time, I will be debugging trough the code in Visual Studio, performance analysis, some architecture review etc.
I have read couple of blogs on font sizes to use, templates to use on Visual Studio among other very useful tips.
What I am looking specifically for is how to keep the session interesting without making it a dry code walkthrough? How to avoid making people fall asleep? Would be great to hear some stories..
I know ultimately it is upto me but I am certainly willing to give it a try..
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1
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asked Sep 12 '08 at 19:20
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Good tips for a Technical presentation
I am planning to give a Technical presentation for a product we are building.
Intended audience is Technical developers. So, most of the time, I will be debugging trough the code in Visual Studio, performance analysis, some architecture review etc.
I have read couple of blogs on font sizes to use, templates to use on Visual Studio among other very useful tips.
What I am looking specifically for is how to keep the session interesting without making it a dry code walkthrough? How to avoid making people fall asleep? Would be great to hear some stories..
I know ultimately it is upto me but I am certainly willing to give it a try..
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