Google Presentations Coming This Summer

April 17, 2007 | Leave a Comment

Google announced today that presentations are coming to Google Docs and Spreadsheets. This was of course rumored a couple months ago, and certainly expected (or eagerly awaited…) by the tech industry.

From the blog:

we want to welcome the team from Tonic Systems to Google. Tonic, which we’ve just acquired, is based in San Francisco and Melbourne, Australia. They have some great technology for presentation creation and document conversion, and it will be a great addition as we add presentation sharing and collaboration capabilities to Google Docs & Spreadsheets.

Looking into Tonic a bit more deeply lead to the FAQ on tonicsystems.com:

“Tonic Systems is a San Francisco-based company that provides Java presentation automation products and solutions for document management - Tonic Systems Builder, Tonic Systems Filter, Tonic Systems Transformer, Tonic Systems Viewer, and JarJar Links. Features of their products included text extraction for indexing documents, presentation creation capabilities and document conversion tools.”

My only fear is that the technology they are buying as part of the Tonic acquisition is Java based. Docs and Spreadsheets is much lighter as pure javascript and xhtml. I trust Google will strike the appropriate balance and get this new application integrated and working nicely. As soon as screenshots begin to emerge, I’ll be sure to post those.

google, google presently, tonic, tonic systems, presentations, presentation, powerpoint, office, docs, documents, spreadsheets, docs and spreadsheets, writely, docs & spreadsheets, java, javascript

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Google Presently?

February 7, 2007 | 3 Comments

Garett Rogers on ZDNet points out an interesting section of the Google language file in Google Docs.

JavaScript:
  1. var MSG_VIEW_PRESENTATION="View presentation";
  2. var MSG_PRESENTATION_SETTINGS="Presentation settings";
  3. var MSG_DOC_TO_PRESENTATION="Convert document to presentation";
  4. var MSG_DOC_TO_PRESENTATION_HINT="Once your document is converted to a presentation, you can insert slide breaks using Insert> Slide from the main menu.";
  5. var MSG_PRESENTATION_TO_DOC="Convert presentation to document";
  6. var MSG_POPUP_BLOCKER="Presently is unable to launch your presentation in full-screen mode. Check your pop-up blocker settings.";
  7. var MSG_NEW_SLIDE_TITLE="New Slide";
  8. var MSG_UNSUPPORTED_BROWSER="Unsupported Browser Presently doesn't support Opera and will not function properly. Would you like to continue anyway?";
  9. var MSG_SLIDE_INDEX="Slide %1 of %2: %3";
  10. var MSG_NEXT="Next";
  11. var MSG_NEXT_HINT="Space, Enter, N";
  12. var MSG_PREV="Previous";
  13. var MSG_PREV_HINT="Backspace, Del, P";
  14. var MSG_ZOOM_IN="Zoom in";
  15. var MSG_ZOOM_OUT="Zoom out";
  16. var MSG_ZOOM_RESET="Zoom reset";
  17. var MSG_TOGGLE_AUTOFIT="Toggle AutoFit";
  18. var MSG_PICK_THEME="Choose theme:";
  19. var MSG_THEME_BLANK="Blank";
  20. var MSG_THEME_GOOGLE="Google";
  21. var MSG_THEME_LIQUID="Liquid";
  22. var MSG_THEME_MONOCHROME="Monochrome";
  23. var MSG_TOGGLE_TOOLBAR="Hide/show toolbar";
  24. var MSG_EXIT_PRESENTATION="Exit presentation";
  25. var MSG_END_OF_PRESENTATION="End of presentation. Are you sure you want to exit?";

This tips the hand and shows they are intending to have an application called "Presently" and it will have theme capabilities. We would assume it will export and import from Microsoft Powerpoint...

On a side note, Google has already reacted to this by pulling the above quoted language from the file.

google, presently, presentation, google docs, google presently, google, powerpoint, microsoft, microsoft powerpoint, javascript, garett rogers, zdnet

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Summit 2006, A Great Success

June 14, 2006 | 7 Comments

In April Plymouth State University had a large showing at SunGard Higher Education Summit 2006. In fact, 13 PSU staff attended and gave 14 presentations.

While at Summit in Orlando it quickly became clear that PSU was a significant presence at the 7000+ attendee conference. A fairly substantial accomplishment for a small, public institution in northern New Hampshire. As a whole the conference was an amazing experience for many of us. We learned a lot, had a lot of fun, and felt a bit like rock stars for 3 days.

This was my third Summit attendance and the second time I was presenting. I personally had the pleasure of giving four presentations over the course of this conference. Two which were normal solo presentations, one less formal in the developers lounge, and a third with my colleagues Ken Kochien and Jen Hall. Being able to interact with this many people with great ideas, questions and general excitement was exhilarating.

New at Summit this year was the Luminis Developer's lounge which was primarily organized by Jon Wheat of Messiah College and founder of the Luminis Developer's Network. As far as I could tell, the lounge was a great success where many of us engaged in informal in depth discussions among each other and with some significant SunGard representatives including Vishal Goenka and Josh Horner. My time spent in the lounge was amazingly valuable and insightful.

I'm finally getting around to writing this article because I was notified today about the results of one of my two official solo presentations. Specifically in reference to the presentation titled Implement and Deploy Banner Channels. Apparently reviews on that presentation were exceptional, placing me in the top five Summit 2006 presentations. I left that presentation feeling good about it, but I was not aware it was that well received. As part of this recognition, I have been awarded a free 4 night stay in one of the Summit hotels for Summit 2007 in Las Vegas, Nevada on March 19-22.

I figure I can take a brief opportunity to have a big head and share a subset of the comment feedback I received from the session evaluations:

  • Best session yet. Did exactly what it said on the tin!
  • Excellent Speaker--good topic--interesting discussion.
  • Great presenter. Good info. Would have liked to see a few more technical examples. Good overview of deployment issues.
  • He answered all my questions and saved me valuable time in guess work
  • I found this presentation very helpful and found the speaker easy to identify with.
  • Presenter seem real knowledgeable on the topic and seemed to appeal to many of the techies in the room.
  • Totally relevent to where we are and what our issues are! Thanks!
  • Very interesting and informative -- hopefully this will help us dodge a few of these "gotchas". Thanks!
  • very knowledgable about issues that may be encountered, good advice on how to approach them for quicker resolution
  • very well done, zach. timely topic, nicely presented.
  • Zach held the best session I have been to all conference.
  • Zachary is the Best presenter of the conference! Great presence with his audience!
  • Zachary Tirrell was an excellent presenter, made the topic very interesting.

OK, so that is enough warm fuzzies to make me feel guilty about even posting it. Regardless, I have to say I would not have had any where near the success I have enjoyed with this if not for the support of the amazing MIS team I work with. Additionally, all aspects of ITS make any success we have with ventures like Luminis possible.

Summit 2006 rocked. From the great number of presentation we gave on varying topics, our Dan-athon through the Disney parks, the hilarious quotes extracted from our hugely entertaining group, to Laurianne's participation in the closing session improv, Summit 2006 was a huge success for Plymouth State, my colleagues, and me personally. Here's looking forward to Summit 2007 in Las Vegas!

conference, higher education, jon wheat, ldn, luminis, luminis developer's network, plymouth state university, presentation, sct, summit, sungard, sungard higher education, zachary tirrell

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Win2K3 R2 TechNet with Michael Murphy, Dig It?

March 1, 2006 | 3 Comments

 Microsoft TechNetPoint of fact, no.

Yesterday I attended a Microsoft TechNet event with Michael Murphy. My interest in this specific TechNet was to learn what I could about Microsoft's federated identity management plans.

The good news is that Active Directory Federation Services (ADFS) is now released. This package implements the WS-Federation standard for federated single sign on (SSO).

To Murphy's credit he started the federated discussion with what I think is the perfect analogy, the drivers license. I'll talk more about that at a later point, but I loved his quote: "Where is my drivers license for the Internet?"

It was when he started to be asked questions about their solution that his shallow knowledge and inexperience in this field became readily apparent. A gentleman asked the question, "How does this relate to the Liberty Alliance?" Murphy was not at all familiar with "Liberty" and basically dismissed the question. Unfortunately this would be like someone presenting about SQL Server and not being familiar with MySQL...

Anyway, another participant tried to get at what might allow LA and ADFS to interact, he asked: "Is this product SAML compliant?" Murphy said he'd never heard of SAML, and to him it sounded "like a camel named Sam." Obviously this response was not useful to anyone...

At this point I piped up and asked about how ADFS exchanged authorization information with the service provider, the question was something like "how does it assert authorization and attribute information?" Murphy said it doesn't. Unfortunately I knew this had to be untrue...

ADFS could not possibly be ONLY about authentication and completely ignore the authorization issue. I re-framed my question saying that attributes and authorizations were key to identity. He said they were not, this system addressed the authentication issue and attribute information was never communicated. Fear of sounding more like a dink led me to give up at this point...

I should have asked "What good is your drivers license without attributes for your age, sight restriction, etc.?" Maybe he would have "got it" then...

Moving on, Murphy demo'd how the interaction would occur using some virtual servers he had. The interface for managing and setting up these federated connections seemed pretty easy and intuitive.

When Murphy logged into the service provider interface in the demo, I immediately noticed that the newly created account already had a bunch of attributes. Most notably, a $500 spending limit.

I had to ask: "How does the service provider know this newly created user has a $500 spending limit?" Murphy stumbled with this, but threw out a blatantly off the cuff and incorrect response.

At this point a guy behind me asked "Can you scroll down?" This was it, clearly my fears for a half implemented federated system were really just due to a poor presenter. A pile of attributes, including custom defined ones including title were being listed in a textarea as the things being passed.

So anyway, ADFS has potential, but we'll have to try it out for ourselves.

Stuff that intrigued me from other sections of the event:

Can we run Active Directory Application Mode (ADAM) centrally to manage our authorizations for all web-based applications? 'Cause this would rock.

Windows Server Update Services (WSUS) could be useful for PSU...

Distributed File System (DFS) and the Branch Office Management seems partially implemented, not well thought out, and overall garbage.

The Cygwin replacement, or is there more to it?

Finally, did Michael Murphy learn his presentation style from Billy Mays?

"michael murphy", microsoft, "active directory", "active directory federation services", "identity management", presentation, technet, "windows server 2003 r2", cygwin, "billy mays", wsus, "active directory", ad, adfs, adam, "UNIX Interoperability Components", unix, windows, "Active Directory Application Mode", "Windows Server Update Services", "liberty alliance", "federated identity management", saml, dfs, "distributed file system", ws-federation

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S5, A Good Start

January 18, 2006 | 2 Comments

I really like the idea of having all my office applications replaced by web based versions. I want to be able to manage any document from where ever I'm sitting on whoevers computer. I then also want to be able to collaborate and share viewing and/or authoring with whomever I like.

Writely does this very well as relates to Microsoft Word. For three months now I have used Writely exclusively for my word processing needs. I no longer have any use for Word.

S5 is billed as "A Simple Standards-Based Slide Show System." Check out this example slideshow. I love what they are accomplishing with their standard, and it is purely XHTML, CSS, and JavaScript in the background.

If someone can take this concept one step further and build a nice WYSIWYG tool to create slideshows and make it web based, PowerPoint may be the next Office application I stop using.

Maybe the Writely developers could add a simple tab to their app that allows creation of presentations on the S5 standard... Whoever does it, I'll be in line for the beta, as I'm sure thousands of other will be as well.

s5, writely, word processing, word, excel, xhtml, html, web2.0, web 20, web 2.0, presentation, presentations, standard, javascript, collaboration

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SunGard SCT Summit 2005 Presentation

July 18, 2005 | 6 Comments

L Palm 148X143Earlier this year I presented at Summit in Hawaii on Plymouth State University's implementation of LDI for eLearning. LDI stands for Luminis Data Integration. Basically we use LDI for semi-realtime data integration and SSO between Banner, WebCT and Luminis.
A few people have requested a copy of my presentation, so here it is: LDI Implementation Case Study at PSU

banner, integration, luminis, portal, presentation, sso, sungardsct, uportal, webct, ldi, ldis, luminis data integration suite

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