Book Reviews


[Day Permalink] Thursday, February 20, 2003

[Item Permalink] Reviewing Apple Keynote 1.0 -- Comment()
I had the Keynote 1.0 application on loan from Apple for a couple of weeks. I was moderately impressed, and wrote a review for an IT magazine in Finland. Here are some of the things I learned:
  • The user interface of Keynote is well thought out, and quite powerful.
  • There should be more themes available (or easy-to-use tools to generate themes with customized elements).
  • Some features are missing, for example cropping of bitmap figures.
  • Import of PowerPoint files is not faultless, but mostly works well, with small need for manual correction.
  • Import of multi-page PDF documents would be a good feature to have.
  • Importing and exporting to the OpenOffice Impress format would be a good addition.
  • Exported files (PDF, PowerPoint, QuickTime) are usually huge, mainly because Keynote is not compressing the figures.
  • It is possible to directly edit the XML file format of Keynote (or to generate a presentation programmatically).
  • The figures included in a presentation are inside the "bundle" directory of the presentation. Thus the figures are easy to edit outside the Keynote application.
  • Keynote runs well on a 1 GHz PowerBook G4, but less powerful machines may have problems in running the application smoothly.
  • The price is about right, compared to PowerPoint.
  • Keynote is not really an alternative to PowerPoint, because it is only available for Mac OS X. If you need an alternative to PowerPoint, consider the Impress program of OpenOffice.
I hope Apple continues to develop Keynote, and corrects the weak points. I haven't used Keynote extensively in my work yet, but I did decide to buy a copy of the application. A 20-slide presentation made in PowerPoint was relatively easy to "polish" in Keynote, and it now looks much nicer than in PowerPoint. The fancy 3D transitions between slides are perhaps a bit too much for some viewers, though.


[Item Permalink] Girlfriend stops reading breakup letter at page 20 -- Comment()
News Is Free: Popular Items points to Girlfriend Stops Reading David Foster Wallace Breakup Letter At Page 20:
Claire Thompson, author David Foster Wallace's girlfriend of two years, stopped reading his 67-page breakup letter at page 20, she admitted Monday. [...] "It was pretty good, I guess, but I just couldn't get all the way through," said Thompson, 32, who was given the seven-chapter, heavily footnoted "Dear John" missive on Feb. 3. "I always meant to pick it up again, but then I got busy and, oh, I don't know. He's talented, but his letters can sometimes get a little self-indulgent."


[Item Permalink] Snow In NYC -- Comment()
n3rd.net writes: "Yes that is Times Square. Credit goes to The Sun for the picture." I used to compete in cross-country skiing, so this picture warms my mind. ;-)

image


[Item Permalink] Finland Tops Rankings in IT Report -- Comment()
Global Information Technology Report 2002-2003 is now available: "The Report is the most comprehensive, cross-country assessment of the state of information technology, covering 82 economies around the world."

Here are the Top 10 rankings:

Country
Score
Ranking
Finland
5.92
1
United States
5.79
2
Singapore
5.74
3
Sweden
5.58
4
Iceland
5.51
5
Canada
5.44
6
United Kingdom
5.35
7
Denmark
5.33
8
Taiwan
5.31
9
Germany
5.29
10