Few people waited, and even more so, no one wanted it, but we continue to release our great educational posts.
Today we have presentations on the agenda, or rather, services for their creation.
There are a whole bunch of sites with all kinds of thematic services for every taste and color, and they are located in 10 seconds, so we will do without links, but only look at a couple of participants of these "tops".
Number one: Prezi. The service is for the gifted, because, unlike the classic PowerPoint, it has an unusual interface and a non-classical method of design and presentation: there is only one "frame" with many elements, and the transition between them is carried out by means of a zoom effect. Of course, you can make a presentation of a classic slide type, but it doesn't make sense, because the whole essence of the application is lost, and it's easier and faster to do this whole thing in a PowerPoint.
Qwiki. Cavo? You ask me, and I will answer-a full hat. The developers wanted to do one thing, but it turned out to be another. It would seem that there is a plus: you can stuff elements of any format into a presentation, but this can also be done in a PowerPoint. It would seem simplicity, but everything is simple in the Powerpoint, and then you will find out that simplicity is only at the most elementary stages of creating the material, and you will understand that this is really a full hat. There is an interactivity of elements, but in order for the interactive to go beyond the boundaries of a simple picture, you need to complete the editing courses, learn how to reduce the sound, accurately hit the timings and dance Jewish folk dances.
Slideshare. At least something human-like in all this variety of vulgarity and nastiness. Slideshare is a resource for hosting your presentations. It goes without saying that this is not the whole functionality of this thing. You can: check user activity regarding your presentation, collect processed and structured data about users who have familiarized themselves with your product. Among the relative disadvantages: the limitations of the free version and quite significant prices for monthly subscriptions.
Projeqt. Wait, this is real... this is a really useless piece of code. You can link your "presentation" to your social networks so that it is automatically updated. "But it's useless," you say. Yes, it is, I will answer. Does anyone read Donald Trump's tweeter through this thing? That's right, no one, because even if there was such an opportunity, everyone would go to Twitter, and not to this castrated version of the social network. I don't see the use of this thing, because. I suspect it just doesn't exist.
SlideRocket. Here you can find a bunch of templates for presentations, carry out some customization of your presentations, add interactive elements, as well as conduct online broadcasts with the dismantling of your presentation. Well, there are a lot of much more popular services that, although not alone, but in a pair, allow you to do the same, and you don't have to go into the additional software, but, in general, the application is not bad.
Below you will see a couple of links to Google drive with examples of presentations in Prezi and Google presentations.
https://prezi.com/view/P3HgRg3aLahnLmz3E82L/
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1eY_JBygFxqEVB2Oa8bnmJvuih715aO28dzteE_XuK8s/edit?usp=sharing
Thank you all for your attention. I hope my mega guide will save you from the idea of poking into some of the described projects. Peace to all.
I agree that it is faster to do your presentations in PowerPoint, but Prezi is a bit more interesting, don't you think?
ОтветитьУдалитьYes, I agree that the Prezi is much higher in quality and elaboration than the usual power point. To achieve at least half of the effect that even a good presentation in Prezi gives, you need to graduate from a higher school of programming in the Tatar language, in addition to 3 more diplomas of higher education.
УдалитьFor the sake of truth, I will say that the free version is decently reduced in its functionality (and buying, although not expensive, is clearly not an option for someone who wants to use the service once a month). In addition, all the templates and options that I checked, after zooming into any section, return us to the main screen and it is impossible to change the zoom sequence at such a level that it is completely unnecessary from time to time and knocks down the pace of the narrative. Yes, you can do another one in a separate display field, there is another one in it, but this is a crutch.
Of course, I spent more time in Google presentations, dealing with the link function, so maybe I didn't find some of the Prezi functions. But in general, this is a very good resource, with the help of which, with the proper skill, you can create amazing things.