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Medical interpretations of the PowerPoint presentation October 18, 2008

Posted by Nivek in From the Press, Scientific Talk.
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Just something i felt was interesting to read, since most of us would be able to identify with the most common way of presentations. This was published in one of the most famous scientific journals. Adapted from BMJ 2007;335;1292

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The main purpose of a PowerPoint presentation is entertainment. Intellectual content is an unwarranted distraction. In preparing a PowerPoint presentation, aesthetics should transcend substance. The background colour scheme and logo for your slides should be selected for maximum emetogenic potential. The first inverse ridicule rule of PowerPoint presentation states: “The more lines of writing that can be coerced onto a slide and the smaller the font, the lower the risk of anyone criticising any data which has accidentally been included.” The second rule states: “The number of slides you can show in your allotted time is inversely proportional to the number of awkward questions which can be asked at the end.” PowerPoint has superseded the carousel era, when presentations were severely limited by the number of slots in the slide carousel and the risk of dropping the lot seconds before your talk. Plagiarism laws do not apply to PowerPoint, so cartoons of marginal relevance but high entertainment value can be downloaded and shown at suitable intervals to maintain audience mirth while minimising critical capacity. Research has shown that the ideal cartoon: data ratio is 5:1. The seasoned PowerPoint artist or PowerPointilliste has refined the presentation into a son-et-lumiere extravaganza, in which scattered dots and luminescent clumps of meaningless datasets hurtle on to the screen from all points of the compass, to the strident strains of Handel’s Fireworks Music, building inexorably to a Fantasia-style Sorcerer’s Apprentice climax. This fulfils an important subsidiary purpose of the PowerPoint presentation—to act as a bioassay of the epileptic threshold of the audience, a form of PowerPoint EEG. PowerPoint has spawned a number of hitherto unrecognised diseases. These include PowerPoint phobia (PPP), PowerPoint stress disorder (PPSD), and a form of depression called PowerPointlessness. Yet another purpose of the PowerPoint presentation is to test the capacity of the regional electricity grid. In case this should be found wanting, and your presentation succeeds in fusing the power supply to the surrounding region, it is advisable to have a back-up presentation, a box of matches and a Chinese lantern.

When life stands still… October 14, 2008

Posted by Nivek in Life, Thoughts.
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How do you feel when you have a rude awakening? Do you look back on your life and ponder upon the past? That was what happened to me…Received a shocking news today. A friend passed away… Not very close, but i knew her. And the thing is, she was too young to die… The mood around me was all in a depressed state, and not everyone was in a good mood. I got scolded also, not becos of what i did wrong, but rather, i guess this person just wanted to let it out, and I became the scapegoat…

The last time I had someone close who died was quite a while ago… but the feeling’s different now. I cried for the longest time before, but today, I just felt immune. Couldn’t express my feelings verbally or emotionally, but I could feel my heart bleeding…

It makes me really think back on my life… And to treasure my close ones before I lose the chance…

Just a perl rambling entrapped in the castle, dark and cold…

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