The example I would use is my recent dalliance with the information presentation and design ideas of Edward Tufte.
Stage one: Falling in Love.
Stage two: I Am Not Worthy of This Love.
Stage Three: The Blinders Come Off.
I can't stop doing any presenting. Tufte seems a little rigid in his outlook on things. I may not be Mozart but Salieri had some good tunes also. My figures are good enough to get the point across. These other presentation design guys over here don't think Tufte is the final answer on data presentation.Stage Four: The Breakup
And so the cycle continues.
I think you could apply the same formula to a favorite author that you just discovered, a new political philosophy, management fad, computer program, TV show, new girlfriend, or any other subject of fascination. My goal in life is to get through the cycles as fast as possible to preserve a healthy skepticism and keep a measured perspective. Skepticism is the best philosophy, I love it the most. (... here we go again.)
I mostly agree but stayed in stage 3. I think his first book is his best (not sure if you're up to that yet).
ReplyDeleteRocky phrased it well to me when I first discovered Tufte, he's great for what he does. Then I realized that not every kind of presentation is a data rich topic and that's ok. I do think that PowerPoint is used too much and often a different kind of presentation with a handout as a document instead of in bullet point form might be a better option.
I also like Presentation Zen, Information is Beautiful and slideology
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