There is surely a limit to slides-per-minute, but so far I haven't hit it
I should remember to diarize successes, so...
Yesterday was a big presentation at work. Basically entirely self-driven: I'm talking up a particular technology (Akka), so I figured I'd better do an introductory talk on the subject to educate everybody on the topic. Me being me, I publicized it to the entire engineering organization, nation-wide, and got a hundred-some-odd attendees.
My presentation style has evolved a lot over the past five years. I used to do the same turgid PowerPoint bullet lists as everyone else, but that always sucked, as was driven home to the community some years ago by this cartoon:
The trend in tech presentations lately, though, has been really concise, fast, focused little slides that you flip through as you go.
So yesterday? 135 slides -- a new record for me, by a fair margin. Took a fair while to write and edit, but I managed to slide in at 56 minutes (right about as planned), and folks seem to have gotten a lot out of it, so yay. That's probably approaching as fast as I can talk, but I could probably manage even more slides in a talk that had less code and more visuals.
(Disclaimer: a fair number of those slides are really flipbook animations. It might well be possible to accomplish the same effects in fewer slides with a more sophisticated knowledge of Google Slides. The point, though, is to keep the visuals moving.)
Also, kudos to The Noun Project, land of All The Icons. I maintain a professional account there specifically for presentations like this -- there's nothing like being able to grab icons of dragons and swords to use as metaphors for slaying old programming problems to liven up a talk, or showing ActorSystems as communities of people sending letters around. (And sometimes dying when Exceptions happen.) If you ever need to do professional presentations, it's a really helpful library to have available.
no subject
(Anonymous) 2020-01-16 02:39 pm (UTC)(link)no subject
But yeah, like I said -- flipbook animations. A lot of those slides are, for instance, the same code block, but highlighting different parts of it as I review what's going on here. And in the particular case of Akka, a lot of them are showing how messages flow around the system, and how state changes as you go. It's a good deal of work to set up, but seems to help folks understand what's what...
no subject
no subject
no subject
(Can't get into too much detail, since it's company-proprietary code, but Querki -- my own little startup -- is very, very Akka-based, and I've been using Akka literally since the day the original prototype came out.)
no subject
no subject
(I'm actually responsible for one small but useful, if slightly dated, component of the Akka ecosystem, the Requester library.)
And I should check: do we know each other? I took a poke around your profile earlier today and didn't see anything obvious, but it's always a bit hard to know for sure on a pseudonymous platform like DW. And heaven knows, the world of people who know Akka isn't that huge...
no subject
Oh wow, that's awesome! Very cool :D
And I don't believe so--I started coding professionally like April before last (though basically all of my professional experience is in Scala) and before that I was in school, and on top of that I have a fluorescent light sensitivity which makes things like e.g. attending most conferences not very...well, possible. I do know a couple of people in the tech scene in Massachusetts but unless one of them is leading an extremely thorough double life I am reasonably sure you are not they.
(I did start following you in part because if your Scala posts, though.)
ETA: I parted from my last job before we could start using typed actors, but I'm definitely excited about them :D
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject