The history of corporate presentations from film slides to PowerPoint. Back in the day we all did our fair share of presentations, but likely with far less fancy film slide equipment.
I have these empty slide holders that were my dad's. Feels a shame to just put them in the bin because someone somewhere probably wants stuff like this and can't buy it anymore.
Good heavens, a selection of frames from this early 1970s Disney educational/schools slide presentation, which warns of the the dangers of meddling with the occult, went from bad to worse very quickly. #slides#education#1970s
My biggest photo project was digitizing over 3800 #slides using a flatbed scanner with a slide attachment that scanned 4 slides at a time. Glad that I did it though. #photography
So, what do people use nowadays to make slideshows from Markdown, Asciidoc, or HTML that can ideally render to PDF in addition to HTML?
(if it doesn't do PDF, don't hesitate to suggest anyway!)
SlideShare is selling your old slides - here's how to stop it
Remember SlideShare? It's where we used to upload PowerPoints back in the day. It was easier than emailing them around. I think. No one really remembers. I think they got bought by LinkedIn? Anyway, they're now owned by Scribd.
If someone visits one of your old slideshows and wants to download it, Scribd will char