On Mar 30, 2011, at 5:36 PM, Godfrey DiGiorgi wrote:

> On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 3:26 PM, Larry Colen <l...@red4est.com> wrote:
>> 
>> On Mar 30, 2011, at 2:34 PM, Godfrey DiGiorgi wrote:
>> 
>>> Here's a quicky presentation of my "Communicating" series, rolled
>>> through Keynote to add some effects and a sound track, then output as
>>> a QuickTime web presentation. Took about ten minutes to produce.
>>> 
>>> http://www.gdgphoto.com/communicating25/
>>> 
>> 
>> It looks like it does a great job at what it does.  I personally hate movies 
>> for displaying still images, I don't have an easy way to skip ones I'm not 
>> interested in, even if I can pause on ones I like.
> 
> I don't propose that this is the right way to present still images in
> general, Larry.

I didn't say you were.

> What I was trying to demonstrate here is that you can
> use Keynote to produce a slide presentation with nicely done
> transitions as you flip from slide to slide. The capability of also
> outputting an auto-running slideshow as a movie file is an aside.

It does that well.

> 
> I also presume that if *you* are the one showing images as a slide
> show, you've edited out all the ones you don't want to present. An
> "auto-run" slide show with a recorded audio track of you explaining
> your work is often a handy thing to have for a website where you are
> not there to be in control of the presentation.

There is also that.   The first thing that I probably need to do is  pick a 
laptop and put together a collection of jpegs to show on a it, and then process 
them to the resolution of its screen.

--
Larry Colen l...@red4est.com sent from i4est





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