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PowerPoint Celebrates 25 Years of Boring Slideshows

It's a staple in classrooms and boardrooms across the U.S.A. -- the obligatory PowerPoint presentation. For the past 25 years, whenever and wherever there are people called upon to present information, Microsoft's slide show app has been there. While a fairly convenient way to organize and present a topic, the software's not without its faults, either.

BBC News recently gave a rundown of the program's more glaring problems. Presentation expert Max Atkinson says presenters often rely too much on the slides; speakers will turn their backs on the audience in order to reference the slides. If that wasn't bad enough, audiences tend to get distracted by trying to read every word on the screen. Atkinson says the biggest problem with PowerPoint is that it encourages its users to include too much written information. You've seen it -- the presentation packed with slides that are the word for word script of what the presenter is saying.

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Computers, Webware, Reviews

Make Online Slideshows Without the Making




Do you like making stuff, but absolutely hate the idea of putting any effort into it? Well, we have just the thing for you.

Essentially, Animoto is a Web app that produces videos from photos and music that you upload to the site. It analyzes the data and automatically generates a slide show, pieced together with crazy cuts and visual transitions. It's sort of like a movie trailer, but with pictures of your cat sleeping and your car sitting in the driveway.

Supposedly, the engine even takes into consideration the rhythm, genre, and tempo of the music you insert and makes cuts appropriately. As a result, no two videos are ever the same. Even cooler, you can just point the service to your online photo collections (on Picasa, Flickr, etc), and have it use those for content, rather than having to upload images to the service directly. [From: Animoto]

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Video Games

Violent Video Games: A Visual History


Forbes takes a bruised and bloodied limp down memory lane with a slideshow it's compiled of history's most violent and shocking video games. Kicking off the party is 1976's 'Death Race 2000' for Atari -- the game that's credited with introducing violence into video games because it let you run over pedestrians in a car. More accurately, it let you steer a couple of blocky pixels into some other pixels.

'Death Race' is followed by such modern classics as 'Mortal Kombat,' 'GTA,' 'Doom' and 'Manhunt' (a Switched.com favorite). The truly despicable 'Cluster's Revenge' for Atari is also mentioned thanks to its what-the-hell-were-they-thinking scenes in which the main character rapes a Native American woman.

But while all of the games above were mainstream titles released by big companies on the major consoles of their day –- even 'Cluster's Revenge,' believe it or not –- the rest of the list is populated with heinous, albeit minor league fringe titles. Games like 'Ethnic Cleansing,' which was developed by a neo-Nazi record label. Or, games such as 'Super Columbine RPG' and 'V-Tech Rampage,' both of which re-enacted horrible episodes of campus slayings, but both of which were obviously made by guys living in Mom's basement with way too much time on their hands. We agree that these titles are horrible, but it's not really fair to include them as major milestones in an article entitled, 'A History of Virtual Violence.' In fact, doing so gives them more credit than they deserve.

From Forbes

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