Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Disapointed with Sliderocket

I played around with Sliderocket last week. I needed to teach a lesson to my college classmates and my TA wanted us to be creative and not just copy the format of previous groups who had taught. I couldn't really get around having some sort of digital text presentation but I wanted to avoid the overused powerpoint.

Sliderocket was fairly simple to learn how to use since it's quite similar to powerpoint. My favorite feature is the slide transition. I like the options available for transitioning between slides because it really separates itself from powerpoint by providing a modern visual such as the cuberotate and the swap.  You can also insert videos and links on the slides, but I didn't need to do either.

Another seemingly cool thing is that users can download their presentation. However, you have to pay for it. This was a huge disappointment because I knew the internet connection in the room I would be teaching in is not reliable. I needed something I could use without internet and I was not about to pay sliderocket anything.


Then, Sliderocket was saving my work and something went wrong, an "error" happened. One of my slides was lost and others lost quite a bit of information which I had recently added. I was already running late and had to spend another 30 minutes redoing the lost pieces. I ended up copying and pasting all of my information into a powerpoint because I was so frustrated and mad at sliderocket. This type of thing makes me nervous about working on anything that is saved only on the web. I feel like I have no control whether something gets deleted or not. On my computer, I can at least save it after big additions or revisions and I can even back it up to a flashdrive, but on the web, it could just disappear and I would never see all my hard work every again.

4 comments:

  1. I got so excited in the beginning of your post because I've been wanting to find something different than powerpoint to use for presentations. And then I got to all the issues you were having and it sounds like it's not really worth it. It had such potential though. Like you, I need to tangible presentation on my flashdrive, emailed to myself, and maybe even on a CD. I cannot believe you have to pay to download it! I guess I won't be giving Sliderocket a chance anytime soon. Too many (potential) disadvantages.

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  2. yeah, I am also looking for alternative forms of presentations. So, every once in a while I try out something new from 50+ Ways.... I think Sliderocket would be fine if you have reliable fast speed internet and are going to present it while connected to the internet.

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  3. I appreciate how our generation embraces the "new" so quickly. However, sometimes I think it is nice to rely on something that we know will work (like Power Point). I do realize that Power Point can be a bit boring since many of us have been using it for many years but at the same time I need to find an alternative that I can count on. I have tried a few websites/applications myself and have found that many things can go wrong. Maybe this site will work out its kinks over time. I am sure Power Point wasn't perfect when it came out either.

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  4. haha, true true- change is not ALWAYS a good thing and newer isn't always better

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