re: comfortable speaking space - yes there are cultural differences, but that is the psychology of physical human interaction. However, the principles of vision physiology are culture independent: Vision stimuli trigger reflex interpretations based on past experience. We disregard spaces with minimal luminance changes, and tend to zero in on boundaries between areas of different luminance. Thus, the busier the slide, the more "work" the brain has to do. In the process, we (as presenters) likely lose some control over the prioritization process in the observers mind. Jobs scores again! SImplify content of the slides viewed, and you more likely to focus the mind of the viewer - anywhere in the world, in any culture.
Martin
On Nov 11, 2008, at 4:43 AM, John Embury wrote:
On 11/11/2008, at 7:10 PM, Les wrote:No, that's a standard KN4 transition. It's the fast moving dates I had in mind. With accompanying fast fade to greyIt is effective when used in the right context.I have been able to do similar using with the Appear Build In for each text box immediately followed by the Opacity Action (with the time reduced to 0.1 s and opacity reduced).John
Keynote is only part of iWork. To learn/ask more about Pages or Numbers check out the iWork yahoo group at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/iwork/"
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