socially dysfunctional on Twitpic

using IE6, huh? on Twitpic

Kompas Otomotif: Buat Pengendara Motor, Simak UU No 22/2009 kalau Mau Aman

Kompas Otomotif: Buat Pengendara Motor, Simak UU No 22/2009 kalau Mau Aman

ANTARA News: Ketua MK: RPP Penyadapan Salahi Ilmu Perundang-undangan

ANTARA News: Ketua MK: RPP Penyadapan Salahi Ilmu Perundang-undangan

goobimama:

nickdouglas:

Win and Fail – ImageChan

He had it coming that motherfucker.

Profiles of a Twitter user via www.ngonlinenews.com

Direction for Koprol?

@rampok: Koprol and Foursquare both existed in Singapore. Should be an interesting battle.
@aulia: @rampok difference is Koprol has no game component. I wonder how they’ll differentiate. Also, Koprol faces competition from Buuuk.
@rampok: @aulia @neofreko I’m more worried about Koprol’s tagline : Indonesia’s location-based social network. *facepalm*
@ivansielegar: @rampok @aulia @neofreko – I think Koprol is still finding the identity. So, Tagline is no biggie. You can always reborn yourself later.
@aulia: @ivansielegar they need to figure out in one sentence what they do. I’d be happier once they have it and make it SEA wide.

geekmap.png (image)

Geek Culture

geekmap.png (image)

Presenting Your Ideas ((tag: barcampid, presentation, tips)

The following is my presentation at Barcamp Indonesia on Saturday, December 12, 2009 at Wetiga. I used no slides.
Presenting your ideas

Start with a bang
Your presentation doesn’t have to be impressive, it just needs to get your points across. What needs to be impressive is your delivery, that is the actual work that you’re pitching or selling. First impression matters so get your audience’s attention early to keep them interested.  
You need to be the one who’s presenting, not your slides. Why are you there if they can simply read your slides?

If your audience expects a handout material, don’t give them your slides, give them an actual document that forms the basis of your presentation.
SWIH
Just like news, presentation is often about 5W1H. Who, what, when, where, why, how. In essence, it’s also about getting your audience to understand what you’re trying to say. 

5 minute challenge 
Most people don’t have 1 hour  to listen to your pitch. Many don’t have 30 minutes but everyone can spare 5 minutes.
This is what I’d like to call the 5 minute challenge. Some also call it the elevator pitch. This is compressing your ideas or your points into its most basic form so people can easily understand it. 

Everybody wants a shortcut whenever possible. Why take 60 minutes if you can do it in 5 or less?
Get to know your material
Understand what you’re trying to say. Forget big words. If you can’t understand it yourself, how could anyone else? You need to be able to present without having your slides with you and if you can’t, you need to work on it.

Preparation is key. Preparation is not about time, it’s about finding and putting together the right resources that you need to convey your point. If you already know your stuff, preparation before each presentation is no longer necessary because you’re ready to go.
Prepare for the worst, hope for the best is an old mantra. Prepare for 5 minutes but make sure you have enough material to extend it if you need to or if at the end they have follow up questions.  

Actually you better hope your audience have follow up questions because if they don’t, that means they’re not interested, confused, or they’re asleep. Or they think they already know.
Make a trailer
Your presentation is the trailer to your movie. It’s much more difficult with movie trailers. You only have 30-90 seconds to hook the audience to a 90-120 minute movie. Often a trailer is so much better than the movie because it’s the bait.

How many times have you seen a really awesome movie trailer that make you not just want to watch the movie but actually buy a ticket and watch it and then you leave the theater thinking, "What the hell was that? I want my 2 hours back"?
The audience understands
Remember, audience understanding is more important than what’s on your slides. 

Posted via email from A Geek Dad’s Log | Comment »

Anti-corruption student rally outside eX

In observance of the UN-sanctioned international anti-corruption day, students and the general public took to the streets to show their stance against corruption that’s become endemic in many aspects of Indonesian society. The people are demanding answers for the missing Rp 6.7T spent in “bailing out” Bank Century. The President’s unconvincing stance on the issue left the people wondering if he’s involved somehow. There are also calls for the new VP and the Economics Minister to step down due to their alleged roles in the case.

Sent from my iPhone

Posted via email from A Geek Dad’s Log | Comment »