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Author Topic: How to cope with PowerPoint and Keynote limitations with videoconferencing software  (Read 202 times)
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« on: October 18, 2020, 04:05:10 pm »

How to cope with PowerPoint and Keynote limitations with videoconferencing software

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<p>Presentation software and videoconferencing tools mix like oil and water. That's a particularly unfortunate thing when tens of millions of teachers are forced to use PowerPoint or Keynote to remotely educate kids daily. These apps weren’t designed for interactive remote presentation, and about nine months into the pandemic, the seams aren’t just showing, but they’ve ripped out like a <a href="https://youtu.be/pwWq7LRqN_M?t=70" rel="nofollow">former shirt of Bruce Banner’s[/url].</p><p>The fundamental problem is full-screen presentation mode. For in-person presentations, it makes perfect sense. With two screens—one a laptop and one a projector or being fed into a broadcast or webinar system—a presenter can view notes, use tools for markup, run builds and play videos, and see their next slide or even the set of upcoming slides. They don’t need another screen to also see participants, or they’re in an environment set up by the IT department with multiple computers to enable that.</p><p class="jumpTag"><a href="/article/3583940/how-to-cope-with-powerpoint-and-keynote-limitations-with-videoconferencing-software.html#jump">To read this article in full, please click here[/url]</p></section></article>

Source: How to cope with PowerPoint and Keynote limitations with videoconferencing software
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