Virtual Presentation
[download a sample virtual presentation] 4 Mb This sample is a very compressed executable file. The original file was 142 Mb PowerPoint file.]
If you are unable to give your talk in person, InSITE offers the option to make a virtual presentation. Your paper will be scheduled for presentation. At your paper's presentation time, we will "play" your presentation and, optionally, set up a question and answer session afterwards.
What is a Virtual Presentation. You create a virtual presentation by creating a self-running slide show that includes a voice narration. Most people find PowerPoint to be a convenient software tool they can use to create their presentation, but you are welcome to use other tools, such as a Shockwave embedded within an HTML file.
PowerPoint includes tools for recording your voice for each slide and then advancing to the next slide at the end of each narration. If you are more technically inclined, you can create more advanced presentations using other tools, such as Producer for PowerPoint, a free tool offered by Microsoft.
Good Quality Recording. The aspect that is not as obvious is that you need to record your voice using a good quality microphone in a quiet setting. Ideally, have someone from your Audio Visual department set you up with a high quality lavaliere microphone. If you use slide animation, the result can be very interesting.
Scheduling. Your total presentation time should be about 10-12 minutes since listening to a computer talk is more tiring than listening to a person. We can schedule a "live" question and answer session to follow your presentation if you are willing to be at your computer (using Skype) or telephone following the presentation. Manchester is in time zone GMT 0, so this will be easier for delegates in Europe than delegates in, say, California. Following your presentation, we will call you via Skype, either to your computer (for best sound quality) or your local telephone number, if you choose to take part in such a question and answer session.
What to include (and what to leave out). We suggest that you start by showing a photo of yourself and narrate a welcome to the audience. This gives your talk a more personal touch.
Conclude your presentation with an invitation for delegates to contact you by email (and Skype). Leave your email address on the screen long enough to convey to the audience that you really do want them to contact you.
In 10-minutes, you cannot go over all the points of your paper, so just give enough detail to get the audience interested in following up with you after the conference. They all have access to your paper and many will have read your paper before the conference.
How to get your presentation to us. Your presentation will likely be quite large. Here are some options on how to get the presentation to us:
- Burn A CD
- You
can burn it to CD and have someone else bring it to
the conference or
- Burn a CD and post it to us so that it arrives
by June 1. Post your CD to InSITE Conference, c/o Eli Cohen,
131 Brookhill Ct, Santa Rosa, California 95409 USA.
- You
can burn it to CD and have someone else bring it to
the conference or
- Post Your Presentation on an Accessible Site
- Post your presentation to your own web or FTP site and email
us the URL.
- There are web sites that all you to upload a file to them
and have them "serve" it if you will send me the link. In both
cases, if your presentation is more than a single file, you need to
"zip" all your files into a single one. I like the free open
source software at http://www.7-zip.org/ I recommend obtaining a free account with
http://YouSendIt.com and
after you upload the file to them, you can have them send me
the link.
- Our hands-down favorite is to set up a free account with DropBox. They provide 2 Gb of free online storage (or even more, 2.25 Gb, if you sign up at https://www.dropbox.com/referrals/NTI2OTcxMzM5 ). We are big DropBox enthusiasts. It lets you back up important files to the web, share files easily between home and work computers, set up workgroups of shared storage, or, as needed here, copy files to the "Public" folder and the obtain (by right clicking) the URL to that file. Anyone who knows the URL has read access to the file, so just send me this URL.
- There are web sites that all you to upload a file to them
and have them "serve" it if you will send me the link. In both
cases, if your presentation is more than a single file, you need to
"zip" all your files into a single one. I like the free open
source software at http://www.7-zip.org/ I recommend obtaining a free account with
http://YouSendIt.com and
after you upload the file to them, you can have them send me
the link.
- Post your presentation to your own web or FTP site and email
us the URL.
Do not send huge files by email because this will forever harm your karma.
