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Presentation Zen compares presentations by Bill Gates and Steve Jobs [presentationzen.blogs.com]

My point in comparing Jobs and Gates is not to poke fun but to learn.

In this nicely written piece, the author does this well. The negative effects of powerpoint on our presentations are well discussed elsewhere (such as in Tufte on Powerpoint), but applying the concepts of Zen to public presentation hits a true note.

Simplicity means the achievement of maximum effect with minimum means.
-- Dr. Koichi Kawana

Presentation Zen also has an earlier post discussing the negative sides to Bill Gate's presentations in Bill Gates and visual complexity.

Which reminds me that this site is in desperate need of a Zen-like overhaul. Maybe it's time to put Ascii-Art back into the 80s :)

01:06 PM, 11 Nov 2005 by Mark Aufflick Permalink | Comments (0)

Cocoa and the emerging software market [blog.x180.net]

Great article about how Cocoa is powering the emerging software market. It's about time, really, that application development became like this. The software engineering theory has been steadily improving since the early 70s, and yet software developers have been saddled with crud like MFC!

As my readers will know, I'm starting to dabble with Cocoa development in my spare time. I'm now learning to use Cocoa Bindings (and here) - truly inspiring stuff. I'd love to hang out with the framework designers at Apple :)

10:13 AM, 11 Nov 2005 by Mark Aufflick Permalink | Comments (0)

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  1. Mark Aufflick: all good ideas
  2. Unregistered Visitor: Excellent!
  3. Mark Aufflick: Hey thanks
  4. Unregistered Visitor: Fantastic entry
  5. Mark Aufflick: Bah - dashboard widgets
  6. Unregistered Visitor: Nice
  7. Mark Aufflick: elegant maths (as opposed to elegant rabbit)
  8. Unregistered Visitor: Does that really matter?
  9. Mark Aufflick: Inspiration
  10. Unregistered Visitor: Perhaps...