codethinked (kōdthĭngked) adj. To be consumed by or obsessed with code.

A Technical Presenter’s Journey Part 7: The Four Rs

Today’s post is brought to us by Al Tenhundfeld over at tenhundfeld.org. Thanks Al!

Justin Etheredge's ongoing series of posts on technical presenting has inspired me to finish this post I've had in limbo for a while. 

clock_groundhog_day

Over the last three weeks I've given as many presentations at community events. Overall, I feel they went adequately -- not great but good enough. At this point in my presentation skill continuum, my goal is merely not to fail. If you're not a naturally engaging speaker or storyteller, the journey to giving fantastic presentations will probably be long and overcome only through a lot of practice, and it's not really a state I'm qualified to coach towards. However, I can give advice on not failing miserably. I'm learning there are many subtleties to becoming great, but becoming adequate just takes a little effort and a simple formula.

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A Technical Presenter’s Journey Part 6: Tape Thyself

After missing Monday due to a holiday here in the United States, we are back today with part 6 of my technical presenting series. If you’d like to participate in this series, please contact me via the link above!

Today’s post is brought to us by Lee Dumond over at LeeDumond.com.

Performers do it. Politicians do it. Pro athletes do it. Why not you? If you want to get better at any activity – whether it’s delivering presentations, or tacking a few extra yards to your tee shot – one of the most effective methods is to watch yourself in action.

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A Technical Presenter’s Journey Part 5: Presentation Settings for Visual Studio

Today’s post is by Donn Felker over at donnfelker.com. Thanks Donn!

Unfortunately most presenters do not think about font size until about 10 _after_ they show code to an audience. Its usually followed by the confirmation question from the presenter that goes something like this: “Hey, can you guys see the code?”

Most of the time the answer is… “No, bigger font please … ”. 2 minutes later the font is larger, but usually its only the code editor window. What about the solution explorer, output window, menu’s, etc? Nope, it is still an 8pt font that strains your audiences eyes.

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A Technical Presenter's Journey: Part 4 – Be Confident but Humble

Today's post is from Joel Cochran over at developingfor.net. Thanks Joel!

Justin Etheredge at CodeThinked has asked for people to post some tips and tricks for giving Technical Presentations. His idea is great: provide a repository of Best Practices for technical presenters written by the presenters themselves. The following is my contribution to the cause.

Confidence is King

One thing that keeps never-before presenters from becoming first-time presenters is the misconception that we (the presenters) are all experts on our given topic.  The term expert is pretty specious these days, and as such has lost some of its value. [Digression: If you aren't sure what I mean, check out The 4-Hour Work Week by Timothy Ferris.  It includes a simple checklist on how to become an 'Expert'.]  Yes, most of us select topics we feel pretty comfortable about, but I know some presenters who intentionally select topics they aren’t familiar with just so they have some motivation to dig in and learn the topic.

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A Technical Presenter's Journey: Part 3 – Detailed Notes

Today's post is from Jason Young over at YTechie.com. Thanks Jason!

Justin Etheredge over at CodeThinked is asking for tips for technical presentations. I can certainly relate to his experiences. Technical presentations, or any type of presentation for that matter, can be intimidating, difficult, and scary.

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In my college days, I had to give a presentation in one of my information systems classes. I was pretty arrogant back then (ok, I still am), so I thought it would be a piece of cake to just wing it. I could save time and look like a cool speaker all at the time time. The result was me getting in front of the class, having my face turn red, and basically say “uh” and “um” for 10 minutes. It was so bad that people actually began to laugh. It pains me to even write about it.

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