
Slide Prep:
Using DAC Templates
The provided templates can
be found in the templates section of
this part of the DAC website. All the templates have been tested and
proven to be very well suited for presenting the type of presentations
in a technical community like DAC. We urge you to pick one of the provided
templates.
If, however, you feel the
need to deviate from those, you have to send an example of your suggestion
to slides@dac.com in order to have
it tested on any irregularities and to be given helpful hints on how to
improve your design if necessary.
Features of sample presentation
We have included some examples that
show the use of animation. Except for "Binate covering problem" they have
all been made in Powerpoint95 and 97 and as such show that animation can
be done within one slide. Sometimes it is wise to break up the animation
over several slides so as not to lose track of what is going on. "Binate
covering problem" (originally authored by Olivier Coudert) is an example
of an animation in PPT-4 which makes it necessary to make a different
slide for each animation step thus requiring much thought before starting
to create the animation as every change will force you to make that correction
on each slide involved in the animation.
Although we use PowerPoint 2003 at conference, the program is upward compatible.
We decided to use older versions for the templates so that those of you
who are still working with an older version will not have any problems.
They all convert perfectly well to the newer versions of PowerPoint.
Guidelines
PPT95-97-00 presentation
Guidelines PPT-4 presentation
(left click to view with plug-in, or right click to save to disk)
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This is a stand-alone presentation and as such needs
more information on a slide than if someone is presenting.
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Big, bold fonts in "sans-serif" (Helvetica/Arial) are
the rule for projected presentations.
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Simple, contrasting colors.
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Effective use of animation.
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