Comments on: SlideRocket isn't yet PowerPoint's undoing. But it might be
The presentations software beta opens up to the public today, allowing millions of users to finally compare it to Microsoft's PowerPoint. This one bears close watching.
The presentations software beta opens up to the public today, allowing millions of users to finally compare it to Microsoft's PowerPoint. This one bears close watching.
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Charles Cooper has covered technology and business for more than 25 years. A graduate of Queens College and Columbia University, Cooper received the Excellence in Journalism award from the Northern California branch of the Society for Professional Journalists for column writing.
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The real strength is the publishing capabilities, which is something Powerpoint can't touch.
This is the first true online competitor to Office and other online solutions should pay attention.
1. Keynote isn't nearly as good as Powerpoint. It's fine for a mostly text-oriented presentation, but beyond that, forget it. If you think otherwise, you must be a delusional Apple fan versus a pragmatic slide maker.
2. The Web stuff has potential, but not close to PowerPoint yet. And until 4G wireless coverage is ubiquitous, I'd never use Web apps for a customer presentation.
3. Don't hate Msft for the sake of hating. Channel that passion to demand better from everyone.
Nah.
EVERYBODY should use Powerpoint - because it usually discounted sharply and bundled with Windows.
applications. Microsoft is a big company, and these applications will
surely cut into their margins and their market share, at least
eventually will. Unless Microsoft re-invents it self differently as a
provider of cheap light weight software, they will be overwhelmed by
the advent of free web applications comparable to their own
proprietary services. This blog article brings that point up....
http://cybertelegraph.blogspot.com/2008/09/sliderocket.html
and its free, unlike microsoft office, people might be willing to take
a bit of inconvenience from a web app if its free...
Oh yea, use PowerPoint, then upload to SlideRocket. Then hope the service is running when I get to the customer.
Not very useful.
SlideRocket also lets you download your presentations and take them with you using the SlideRocket Satellite player so even if you don't have a internet connection you're still good to go.
Unquote
In any event the writing is fun: good work; would like to see more lively editorial content from C-Net.
- by ed643 October 3, 2008 3:45 PM PDT
- Hmmm, kinda similar to another service I saw launch last month; flowgram I think it's called. But I think there's was more of an online collaboration tool that allowed you to add webpages as well.
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