The Artima Developer Community
Sponsored Link

.NET Buzz Forum
Presentation Tips for People running Virtual PC or VMWare

0 replies on 1 page.

Welcome Guest
  Sign In

Go back to the topic listing  Back to Topic List Click to reply to this topic  Reply to this Topic Click to search messages in this forum  Search Forum Click for a threaded view of the topic  Threaded View   
Previous Topic   Next Topic
Flat View: This topic has 0 replies on 1 page
Scott Hanselman

Posts: 1031
Nickname: glucopilot
Registered: Aug, 2003

Scott Hanselman is the Chief Architect at Corillian Corporation and the Microsoft RD for Oregon.
Presentation Tips for People running Virtual PC or VMWare Posted: Nov 19, 2004 1:31 AM
Reply to this message Reply

This post originated from an RSS feed registered with .NET Buzz by Scott Hanselman.
Original Post: Presentation Tips for People running Virtual PC or VMWare
Feed Title: Scott Hanselman's ComputerZen.com
Feed URL: http://radio-weblogs.com/0106747/rss.xml
Feed Description: Scott Hanselman's ComputerZen.com is a .NET/WebServices/XML Weblog. I offer details of obscurities (internals of ASP.NET, WebServices, XML, etc) and best practices from real world scenarios.
Latest .NET Buzz Posts
Latest .NET Buzz Posts by Scott Hanselman
Latest Posts From Scott Hanselman's ComputerZen.com

Advertisement

I chatted with G. Andrew Duthie yesterday, and we both agreed it was exceptionally egregious of folks who give Microsoft presentations running Virtual PC to force us to watch their silly presentations with 6pt MS Sans Serif Fonts.

People: If, during your presentation, you say "Uh, ya, you probably can't see this" - you're not only not-prepared, but you're wasting my time. You've got 786,432 pixels up there that are NOT working for you, and you've just let me know verbally, and visually. <sarcasm>Kudos!</sarcasm>

So, a reminder for you to spread the word about how to give a Successful Microsoft Presentation and a few extra updated tips for 2004:

  • ZoomTheHeckIn: Seriously, familiarize yourself with ZoomIn. It's a movable screen magnifier, and you wouldn't believe the appreciation you'll get from the crowd when they can actually see what you're doing.  Remember those 786,432 pixels? How many do you think are working for you when you're demonstrating Calc.exe? Let's just say < 786,432, eh? Put ZoomIn in your QuickLaunch or setup WINDOWS-Z with WinKey to launch it.
  • DOS is Good Green: Set a Command Prompt (VS.NET Command Prompt) to a black background with Kermit-green lettering that is Lucida Console 18pt.  This is scientifically (sez me) THE most visible size and color combo for prompts when presenting. Feel free to use yellow on blue in the privacy of your own bedroom, but throw me and your audience a bone and have one prepared that's, *ahem*, presentable.
  • BigFonty To the Rescue: Have a user already setup (Andrew says don't present as Admin!) that has all their fonts set large. I call mine "BigFonty" - It was either that or "The Full Fonty." That way there's no prep time, you just log in as your Presentation Guy and you're good.
  • Maintain the Illusion: I'm sure it's lovely that you're using VMWare or VirtualPC or even Wine, but please know that your audience doesn't care. Unless you're demonstrating SQL Server clustering fail over by running two VMs, I don't care.  So, don't run your Host PC in 1024x768 and your VPC at 800x600!  Your VirtualPC should follow the SAME rules as your Host. That means, see the rules above! Big fonts, ZoomIn, etc. Most importantly, switch your VPC to FullScreen at the same resolution as your host. Maintain the Illusion. Your audience will thank you.
  • Know Where Stuff Is: For Pete's sake, know your own machine.  Don't go hunting for that file, you should have had that file (or a link) in your presentation folder.  I've got a lot of Shortcuts and or "Junction Points" set up so everything can be found for each talk.
    • Tangent: Down with Subst! A LOT of people don't know you can have Junction Points/Reparse Points/Hard Links on NTFS! It's always been there.  Start thinking about using them to make your builds respect relative paths. Don't make all your developers uses Subst.exe! It's 2004! Down with Subst! I don't want your freakin' S: drive!

These are just a few thoughts I've had after a years of making mistakes. I've taken a number of Presentation Skills classes, but they don't teach you how not to bore or insult your audience. Remember, if you give a crappy small font presentation with tiny dialogs - you LOSE the right to complain about other people's talks.

Read: Presentation Tips for People running Virtual PC or VMWare

Topic: Another guest for our next INDA session Previous Topic   Next Topic Topic: Israeli .Net Deep Dive chat going on right now

Sponsored Links



Google
  Web Artima.com   

Copyright © 1996-2019 Artima, Inc. All Rights Reserved. - Privacy Policy - Terms of Use