Thursday, August 8, 2013

Slid.es: Create Easy And Beautiful Presentations In Two Dimensions

Tools like Microsoft PowerPoint or Apple’s Keynote put an amazingly powerful toolset into hands that make presentations. The key is realising that you should only need a minute portion of those tools. Not every line of text needs to whirl into view with CGI bravado. Not every image needs to glow and throw a shadow. It’s fun to put these effects in, but what looks cool and engaging is often distracting instead. If you want to engage your audience, focus on the speaker and use the presentation to support what you’re saying. Simple keywords and images get you further than big blocks of text and headache-inducing effects.
Part of making professional presentations comes from focusing on key points like that. Another part comes from using the right tool for the job. PowerPoint is an amazing piece of software, but it gives you twenty degrees of freedom. Fifteen of those lead to disaster. Slid.es is a free online PowerPoint alternative to make great presentations. Simply beautiful and beautifully simple.

Slid.es

Slid.es is a simple web app to make presentations. It’s simple to use and easy to make beautiful presentations with. Think Google Docs, but with a minimalist look and its own approach. All of this freely available, although you can upgrade to a Pro version to get more storage and private sharing.
slid.es-main-interface
Getting started is very easy. Just click the big Get Started button on the home page and create a new account. If you don’t want to busy yourself with creating another account from scratch, sign in with your Facebook or Google account instead.
slid.es-create-account
After signing in, Slid.es let’s you know that you don’t have any decks. A deck, in case you’re wondering, is almost the same as a presentation. There are some differences, though.

Decks: Making Multidimensional Presentations

After creating a new deck in Slid.es, you’ll notice something peculiar. Both to the right and below the currently selected slide are buttons to create new slides. Pressing these will effectively add a new slide to the right, or to the bottom of the current one. This means you’re able to create a presentation in two dimensions!
slid.es-double-plus
This is better illustrated with an example. I’ve created a small mockup presentation in Slid.es, making use of both dimensions. By selecting Arrange from the sidebar menu, you get a good overview of the relationships between different slides.
In the example below, we start off with a title slide. Going down brings up an overview of the subject. Going right takes you to a new chapter. Similar to a book, you can view the vertical stacks as chapters in an all-compassing presentation, or you could create a deck of related slideshows, each in a separate stack.
slid.es-arrange
How you use it is up to you. Personally, I like the “chapter-y” feel of it. However, you could also simply work in a single direction and make a simple slideshow; front to back.
Navigating works by using the arrow keys, or the virtual directional pad in the lower right corner of the presentation. Note that you don’t skip the entire stack by moving right. Slid.es first draws the different parts of the current slide, regardless of whether you go down or right. Decks created with a free account are public.

Creating Appealing Slides

Before getting started, take a look at the Style menu in the sidebar. Here you can tweak the global style settings of your slides. What you change here, and also at any later stage, affects your entire deck. In this menu, you’ll be able to select a colour scheme, font, transition animation between two slides, and a transition animation when you change the background in a slide.
slid.es-style
Now, let’s create our first slide. You’ll notice there are no clickable areas set apart as is usual in these presentation suites (e.g. “Click to add title.”). Instead, there’s just a single canvas. Heading 1 is selected in the top toolbar, so you can just start typing to enter a title at the top of your slide. Press Enter, and Slid.es switches to a Paragraph style automatically.
You can change everything involving typesetting in the top toolbar, although generally you’ll only have to change the text style occasionally. This is also where you’ll introduce new bullet lists, change text colour, add links and insert images into your slides.
slid.es-slide-toolbars
Just like the top toolbar tweaks properties of the content in the slide, the right toolbar tweaks the slides themselves. Here you can change the background colour or image, make items appear sequentially during your presentation, position elements freely and change the slide’s HTML code (in that order).
slid.es-fragments
Making items appear on a slide sequentially is incredibly simple. Start by clicking the lightning shaft icon in the right toolbar. Now, click on items in your slide to turn them into fragments. Every fragment is an item that only appears on your screen after you’ve stepped through them. There’s no tweaking the order or animation, though. Make sure to preview the slideshow before you finish.

Sharing The Presentation

Select Share in the left sidebar when you’re done to start spreading those slides around. There are two ways to share your slides. You can send people a link, or embed the slides on a website. (If you’ll be giving a presentation in person, this won’t be necessary.)
slid.es-share
Behind the link, you’ll find an embed of your presentation. In the lower left corner are buttons to enter full screen or open the presentation in a separate window. Additionally, below the presentation, you’ll find social sharing links and a comments section to engage with your audience.
slid.es-comments
Take a look at this sample presentation in action. It’s a minimal presentation, but suffices to show off Slid.es features and how easy these presentations are to navigate.

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Announcing jQuery Mobile 1.4.0 Alpha

The jQuery Mobile team is thrilled to announce the 1.4.0 Alpha release. For this release we focused on performance improvements and reviewing widgets. We also introduced a new default theme and SVG icons. Some of the new features that come with this release are a flip switch widget, a generic filter widget named “filterable”, popups with arrows, tooltips for sliders and we integrated the tabs widget from jQuery UI.

Performance

To improve performance we reduced DOM manipulation. Generation of inner markup for elements styled as butons has been completely removed. In many cases the framework just adds classes to the native element during enhancement and we even reduced the amount of classes that are added by the framework.

Theme inheritance

One of the biggest changes is the way theme inheritance works. In previous versions we used JavaScript to find the nearest parent element with a theme and added theme classes to all elements. This has been replaced by a pure CSS solution where the level of specificity of the selector determines what theme (swatch) is applied. In almost all cases the default for option theme has been removed and widgets get the same theme as their container or page via CSS.

New default theme

This was also a good time to switch to a new default theme with a flat, more modern, design. The number of swatches has been reduced from five to two; a light “A” swatch and a dark “B” swatch. We will update the ThemeRoller soon so you can create your own themes for 1.4.

SVG icons

Not only the theme is new. A big thank you to Glyphish for creating a complete new icon set for jQuery Mobile! These are vector-based SVG icons, but we included a fallback to external PNG icons on browsers that don’t support inline SVG. We are also going to provide additional stylesheets, each with different icon CSS (inline SVG, data-uri PNG, and external PNG) that can be used with the full Grunticon solution.


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Sunday, July 21, 2013

What is SSRS and Why SSRS is asked for in many Job Opening?

This example is from the Beginning SSRS by Kathi Kallenberger. Supporting files are available with a free download from the www.Joes2Pros.com web site.
This will be a 5 day blog post in getting started with SSRS. Today will show the importance of SSRS in the business.
Why is SSRS asked for in so many job openings?
If you talk to an SSRS expert it’s very clear to them exactly why companies really need this invention and how it saves time and adds business value. You don’t have to be an SSRS expert to know its value or to start using it. For example you don’t have to be an airline pilot to know the usefulness of modern transportation. Even the people who don’t know how to run SSRS but need the reports can tell you why that is needed. This blog post will go into why SSRS is an important invention by showing how it improves the usage of information in your company.
Before SSRS there has always been a need for a company to benefit from the use of its own information. Excel spreadsheets have been a popular way to do this for a long time. With SSRS you can still use this solution and gain many other options too.
A friend of mine told me a story about doing database work in the 90s for a major company and how he wished SSRS was available back then. The Vice President of the marketing channel would often come to him just before an important meeting with the board of directors. He often needed to show how certain product sales were performing over time. All this information was in the database so it was my friend’s job to get the information out and organized into a medium the VP could use. This medium was usually Excel. The VP often had meetings all over the world where he showcased this Excel report.
The solution to get the VP to him anywhere he was in the world was an Excel file attached to an e-mail. This worked pretty well but with some drawbacks. One time my friend sent the wrong file in the e-mail. A few minutes later my friend realized his mistake and sent another frantic e-mail to VP. This one was saying to ignore the last e-mail and use this newer one. Would the VP see the correct e-mail in time?
If SSRS had been available, my friend could have created a solution that let the VP run the report any time he wished. The report could have been published to the company intranet where the VP could run it from any of the offices he happened to be traveling to that month. There is a fair amount of work up front to develop and publish the report, but once that work is completed, the report can be reused as many times as needed. My friend could even be on vacation for the first day of the monthly and the VP can get his real-time report.
Not only could the report show the most recent data, the VP could choose to view reports of previous months with just a few clicks. The deployed SSRS is user friendly, and can also be configured to protect reports from being run by the wrong people.
Tomorrow’s Post
Tomorrow’s blog post will show how to know if you already have SSRS installed.
If you want to learn SSRS in easy to simple words – I strongly recommend you to get Beginning SSRS book from Joes 2 Pros.