/dev/world 2016 - A 10 Step Program for Great Tech Talks

By Unknown contributor · 2016-08-28T00:00:00Z · Language: English · 874 views
Source: Internet Archive Format: PDF Undergraduate / College
devworld devworld2016 software development, public speaking, technical presentations, tech conference

"/dev/world 2016 - A 10 Step Program for Great Tech Talks" is a PDF drawn from the Internet Archive and catalogued under Computer Science for Undergraduate / College. From the source: Talk Feedback Please provide feedback for this talk . Abstract You know the code and the project. You’re doing lots of cool stuff. You have plenty of slides. So why is the audience all doing… Slide Collection preserves the upstream link, the original creator credit and the licensing terms; download the file to use it in a classroom, study group or revision plan.

About this presentation

Talk Feedback Please provide feedback for this talk . Abstract You know the code and the project. You’re doing lots of cool stuff. You have plenty of slides. So why is the audience all doing their email? It doesn’t have to be that way! Great presenters are made, not born. The way to become a better speaker is through training, science, and practice. In this tutorial, veteran conference presenter VM (Vicky) Brasseur will teach you the ten steps to great tech talks: Know Your Audience Have an Idea Tell a Story Craft Your Presentation Practice Your Talk Get Ready to Speak Present Yourself Deal with Demo Failure Interact with the Audience Continue the Conversation If you have never attended a speaker training before, this workshop will show you how much better your talks could be. If you have, you might pick up a few tis and ideas. And if you’re presenting at /dev/world, this tutorial will give you some last-minute changes to tweak your talk.

How to study this deck

Computer-science slides are deceptively dense. Code snippets and diagrams collapse hours of design decisions into a few lines, so resist the urge to skim. Run the snippets locally, change one variable, and observe what breaks.

Undergraduate viewers should treat this as a scaffolding for deeper reading — the slides outline the territory, but the textbook chapters and primary sources remain the actual content.

Five questions to test your understanding

  1. What is the single most important claim on the first three slides, and what evidence is offered for it?
  2. Which slide could you remove without losing the argument? Which slide is load-bearing?
  3. Where does the deck switch from definitions to applications? Mark that transition.
  4. What would a student who already disagreed with the conclusion need to see to be convinced?
  5. Which two slides, if combined, would give the clearest one-slide summary of the whole deck?

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Citation & reuse

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