NATW_Slide_Guide

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Transcript NATW_Slide_Guide

Electronic
Presentation Guide
2013 North Atlantic Test Workshop
(Origin: ITC)
08/17/2012 V16.2
About this Presentation
• View this presentation first as a slide show,
then view note pages for more detail
• Use a good virus checker
• Confidentiality not guaranteed
• “Test Slide” at end of presentation
Purpose
• Document mandatory standards and
recommended guidelines for electronic slide
presentation
• Provide electronic template
– The file you are reading has settings,
colors and fonts that conform to ITC
guidelines
– You may edit this file and replace our
slides with your presentation
Outline
• Standards vs Guidelines
• Technical specs for electronic slides
• Milestones and schedule
• Good and bad examples
Standards and Guidelines
• Standard: mandatory requirements for ITC
presentations
– Presentation dropped for failure to follow
– Standards are in white italic text
• Guideline: suggested good practices
– Result in good visuals
– It’s your choice: Deviate at your own risk
– Guidelines in ordinary yellow text
Projection Computer
• Pentium PC, 1 GHz or faster
• 1 Gbyte minimum CPU memory
• Microsoft Windows 7
• PowerPoint, Office version 2007
• ITC supplies projection computer
• ITC preloads all presentations
• No changes at the conference
Presentation File
• One file per presentation
• .pptx format
• File totally self contained
• No links to:
– Other files
– The internet
If You Use Different Versions:
• Projected with Microsoft PowerPoint 2007
• .pptx or .ppt file extension
• 2003, 2000, ‘95 or ‘97 format OK
– but check bullet fonts with PPT 2007
– and check animation with 2007
• Mac Office Versions OK, but take precautions
Special Fonts or Symbols
• Special fonts, symbols, bullets not on
projection computer
• Watch out for:
– Wingdings
– MS Line Draw
– Monotype Sorts
– Scientific symbol fonts
– Asian language fonts
• Can embed TrueType fonts in file,
– But it increases upload times
NEW
Info
Style Guidelines
• 15-25 slides, including 4 mandatory slides
• Each slide should have a title
• 9 lines max on a text slide
• 7 words max per line
• In “File->Page Setup…” window specify:
– Slides sized for: “On Screen Show”
– Slide orientation: Landscape
• High contrast: Light lettering/lines on a
dark background
Style Guidelines (cont)
• Short phrases, not long sentences
• Use Arial, or similar sans serif font
– This line uses the Helvetica font
– The rest of the document uses Arial
• 36 Point Titles
• 28 point text
Mandatory Slides
• Title slide (logo permitted here)
• Purpose (of your work) slide
• Outline slide (of your talk, not your paper)
• Detail slides (ie slides 4-24) go here
• Conclusion slide
Other General Tips
• Company (university) logo on title slide only
• Show only what you will talk about
• Use single muted color for blank slides
– Use to focus attention on speaker
Contrast
• High contrast very important
• Use light lines/text on a dark background
– Foreground: White, yellow, light cyan
– Background: Black, dark blue, dark brown
– Caution: Red, orange or blue lettering and
lines become unreadable when projected
Other Color Schemes
• This slide guide uses a very conservative
yellow on dark blue scheme
• These colors work well
• Other color schemes work, too
• Just keep bright detail over a dark
background
• Two examples with other color schemes that
worked well at past conferences follow:
Black Provides Great Contrast
Simulation Environment
HDL ATE
Model
Test Program
Control
Signal
Connections
HDL Device
Model
ATE Rules
Simulation
Report
Dark Green Can Work Well
10
8
DO NOT APPLY DFT
Die volume
aescape = 15
10
aescape = 10
7
aescape = 5
aescape = 1
10
Worst case
6
APPLY DFT
10
5
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
Die size (cm2)
3
3.5
4
Display Speed
• Slides should display instantly
• Do not distract the audience with slow
transition effects
• Avoid overuse of slow graphics, fonts and
special effects
Transitions Between Slides
• Special animation when changing from one
slide to another
• Usually highly distracting to audience
• Use only as special attention getter
• Default settings should be:
– Effect:
No transition
– Speed:
Fast
– Advance: On mouse click
Transitions Between Lines
• Can be highly effective
• Focus attention on a specific line of a slide
• Dim previous lines
• Make transitions be instantaneous
• Be consistent
• Suggest the technique used in this slide
• Use sparingly
Sound Effects
•
DO NOT USE SOUND EFFECTS
• Projection computer not connected to sound
system
• Sound effects slow down slide transitions
• Noise from projection computer may distract
audience
Borders
• Do not use borders
• They reduce the amount of space available
for your text and data
• They slow down the slide display
Diagram slides
• Keep diagrams simple
• Easy to view
• Make text readable
• Use all space in rectangle
• Example follows:
Backplane ASP Connections
tdo
tck
PSBM
tms
tdi
trst
Board 1
Board 2
Board 3
ASP
ASP
ASP
Presenting Data - Graphs
• Use graphs, not tables
• Keep graphs simple
• Eliminate or subdue distracting grid lines
• Use large font sizes
• Example follows:
Fault Coverage (%)
Fault coverage vs. No. of Vectors
100
80
60
40
20
0
1.0E+01
1.0E+03
1.0E+05
No. of Vectors
1.0E+06
File Transfers:
• Upload .pptx File to ITC Web Site
• Similar to upload of final manuscript
• Topic Coordinator downloads & reviews
• Can use in either direction
• Other transfer arrangements by special
arrangement with Topic Coordinator
Schedule
• Sep 10: Sample upload test -- upload
sample presentation file to ITC site for initial
font, color and size checks
• Sep 30: Upload first full draft of PowerPoint
slide presentation
• Oct 19: Upload final version of PowerPoint
presentation
• Nov 5: Practice presentations in rehearsal
room at ITC
• Nov 6-8: Actual ITC sessions
NEW
Info
Some Bad Examples
• The next three slides show examples of bad
practices that should be avoided:
– Bad slide layout
– Improper color use
– Sound and transition effects gone mad
(Press the “Enter” key to continue)
• This slide has no title. Titles help guide the audience through
the talk. All slides except photographs should have a title.
• The type on this slide is too small. It’s readable here, but when
projected, only the presenter and maybe those in the front rows
will be able to read it. Those in the back will be completely lost.
• USE OF ALL CAPITAL LETTERS OR ITALICS also makes
slides difficult to read. Use dark backgrounds; not light!
• This slide would be easier to follow if indentations were used.
• Don’t design your ITC slides to stand alone. They are a guide to
your presentation. If they were understandable by themselves,
we could just publish them and forget about presentations! Your
slides support what you say: They don’t replace it.
• This slide has too many words and too many points. Keep your
slides under nine lines.
Bad Color Usage
Poor
Contrast
Text too tiny
tck
PSBM
tms
tdi
trst
Board 1
Board 2
Board 3
ASP
ASP
ASP
How to Annoy The Audience (Press
Enter)
• Misuse sound
• Overuse transition effects
• Focus the audience on your slides, not the
speaker
• Try to use every feature PowerPoint has to
offer
Conclusion
• Keep your slides simple
• Use large fonts for high visibility
– 36 pt for titles
– 28 pt for details
• High contrast colors
• Highlight, don’t detail
Test Slide
• If your text and drawings fit within the white
rectangle, then you will be able to project
everything correctly. Press “Enter” 3 times.
Circle?
Square?