The videos from Ignite Boise 2 (held at the Egyptian Theater on July 16, 2009) are up on a YouTube Channel. They are an interesting collection of 16 public speeches on topics ranging from the small to the large (both literally and figuratively).
The Ignite format calls for a five-minute presentation with exactly 20 slides that advance automatically every 15 seconds. Wyatt Werner explains it in this video. In a previous post I likened Ignite to being drafted into a PowerPoint Marines Marching Band. The fixed time per slide is a serious constraint that these presenters were able to overcome, sometimes brilliantly. They manage to make it look easy, but it is really difficult.
Here are the titles and speakers (click to link to a video):
Why Geoscience Should Be One of
Don’t look now, but I think you might be a feminist - Adrean Casper
The Owls are Not What They Seem - Brian Bothwell
How being intentional alters ones reading experience- Amanda Patchin
The Last Covenant and the First Car to the Moon - Mike Boss
It’s the Message, Stupid! - John Foster
The Juice of the Barley - Wyatt Werner
Studio Style: artist’s togs and tasks - Jeremiah Robert Wierenga
The Secret Life of Everybody - Stephanie Worrell
If You Stick an Entrepreneur’s Head in an MRI What Would We See? - Norris Krueger
Why we all don’t live on the Beach? - Rich Taylor
Cosmic, Mechanistic, and Organic Cities - Martin Johncox
Barter
Be Danger Ready - Jesse Murphy
How an evil band called the Eagles almost destroyed rock and roll - Jamie Cooper
Turkish Coffee - Brian Cohen
Links for most of the videos from Ignite Boise 1 are on this page. The missing one is by David Gapen of the Resueum on Wonders Inside of Useless Things. The Reuseum also did a rubber band dragster competition during the intermission at Ignite Boise 2.
You might like this talk I gave about how to do an ignite talk, *in* the ignite format :)
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRa1IPkBFbg
Scott:
ReplyDeleteAn excellent how- to speech! Thank you for sharing it.
The Ignite constraint of fixed time per slide isn’t the only way of making a brief presentation more difficult. In a previous post on January 25, 2009 about how to “Get out of a rut and add some pep” I suggested some other ways, in order of increasing difficulty:
1. Turn your presentation into a poem
2. Add music and turn it into a song
3. Sing your song a capella
4. Turn your song into a music video
Richard