Holden Hao <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > The main issue is the animation. They have been using this feature > in their presentations. With regards to the type of font, the issue > can be avoided using the most common fonts like Arial and Times. If > there is no animation then there is no problem.
Dare I say that animation isn't everything? In fact, animation all too often detracts from a presentation. (But yeah, yeah, it's hard weaning people off the habit...) The only effect I use in my presentations is just highlighting different lines. This is easily accomplished by duplicating the slide and highlighting things by hand. Even when I use Powerpoint, I do this effect by hand. I can never figure out how to tweak the animation to be just as I want it to be. ;) It inflates the slide count, though, and makes it harder to print things out. Hmm... Does anyone have a nice fix for that? WordArt. WordArt gets abused so many times... <laugh> My favorite transition is dissolve, but it has to be a really smooth dissolve. ;) I don't remember having that in OO.o Impress files, so I don't use transitions between slides. Now if I could just get neat transitions or highlighting in my PDFs... -- Sacha Chua <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> - open source geekette http://sacha.free.net.ph/ - PGP Key ID: 0xE7FDF77C interests: emacs, gnu/linux, personal information management, CS ed applying as a Debian new maintainer | looking for a grad school -- Philippine Linux Users' Group (PLUG) Mailing List [EMAIL PROTECTED] (#PLUG @ irc.free.net.ph) Official Website: http://plug.linux.org.ph Searchable Archives: http://marc.free.net.ph . To leave, go to http://lists.q-linux.com/mailman/listinfo/plug . Are you a Linux newbie? To join the newbie list, go to http://lists.q-linux.com/mailman/listinfo/ph-linux-newbie
