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How PowerPoint Makes You Stupid
Book

How PowerPoint Makes You Stupid

The Faulty Causality, Sloppy Logic, Decontextualized Data, and Seductive Showmanship That Have Taken Over Our Thinking

The New Press, 2012 más...

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Editorial Rating

7

Qualities

  • For Beginners

Recommendation

Franck Frommer, an expert in the field of communications, has written a passionate book about – of all the unexpected topics – PowerPoint. He recognizes the program’s usefulness, technical excellence, flexibility and pervasive applicability, even as he criticizes its impact on the way people perceive, transmit and think about information. Part of his concern is that the program’s popular utility makes it ubiquitous and, thus, problematic. Though he may take his dismay a bit far when he holds PowerPoint solely responsible for the “dumbing down” of society, Frommer makes an interesting argument about the program’s effect. If you think PowerPoint – or any computer program – is totally harmless, think again. Frommer walks the reader through the history of PowerPoint and demonstrates how “PowerPoint thinking” has infiltrated business, education and government. He gets a little steamed up, and, while he doesn’t really tell you how to use this tool more effectively, he does offer an original line of thought. getAbstract suggests this book to business managers, human resources directors and communications personnel. You’ll still need PowerPoint to do all the things it is good at, and you’ll still use it, but you’ll think about it differently.

Summary

“The Invention of a Universal Medium”

Inventor Robert Gaskins released PowerPoint in 1987, initially just for the Macintosh platform. It became an overnight success, replacing projectors that beamed images from cumbersome transparent plastic sheets. Within 10 years of its debut, businesspeople saw PowerPoint as the best and only option for making presentations in meetings, and that was Gaskins’s intended purpose. Soon after, however, PowerPoint permeated other environments, such as education and government, giving birth to “PowerPoint thinking,” arguments shaped to fit in lists of bullet points next to images on projected slides.

PowerPoint came along at a point in the early 1990s when large companies needed a way to bring their separate departments together to handle large projects and staffers needed a way to communicate internally. PowerPoint offered an easy focus for interdepartmental meetings where representatives from each unit could show their own slide and bullet-point offerings. In the summer of 1992, Gaskins introduced version 3.0 of his program, complete with color, video transfer capability and auxiliary media tools, making PowerPoint much more akin to ...

About the Author

After 12 years in journalism, Franck Frommer went to work in communications and technology. He originally wrote this book in French; George Holoch did the translation.


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    O. A. 1 decade ago
    Let's be honest here. If PowerPoint has any merits or demerits,it rests with the user. I have serious problems with Franck Frommer's treatise as he has particularly taken a one-sided stand regarding an extremely useful tool. The usefulness of any tool rests with the end user. If I consider all the useful things I do with PowerPoint I start to wonder if I could ever do so much without it. It does not have me,I have it and to the extent I make it useful will it remain so. It is same way we blame money for societal problems,whereas the problem is the way we access,distribute and use it. So please let's put the blame where it belongs.
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    A. 1 decade ago
    As I always said: Somebody who really has a point doesn't need PowerPoint to make it.