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==Presentation__Meeting==
1) Use the recipe.
If you deviate from that, then what it's at your own risk.
Hard limit on the number of slides is 10.
Each slide is 1-2 minutes.
You can have between 5-10 slides.
>10 slides -> very good change you won't have the time to talk about what's on the slides.
You _can_ have extra slides.
The QnA is the questions by everybody in the room.
You can also ask questions/should ask questions.
The last couple of minutes the _supervisors_ ask questions.
2) Make sure your slides are numbered.
First slide has to have the title plus your name.
The slides can be posted online, so the first slide might be the business card.
You can use the first slide for a little bit more than just title -- add an _abstract_.
Add a short text.
"At a top level, my project is ..."
Have a bit of an introduction on the very first slide.
3) The second slide: this is societal context of your work.
How does this work affect society at large?
4) After comes the problem statement OR the research question.
You can KEEP the problem statement.
You can also show the contributions.
5) Design to present --> USE Animations to make things appear one by one.
A lot of material all at once is BAD.
Make colored boxes appear one by one in the order you talk about them.
OR include red highlight boxes.
If you look at the component in the red boxes --> steer the attention in the audience, if you want to show something that has so many components as something like Ana Maria's slide 5.
Focus on the most _innovative_ part of the design.
Design has a lot of elements --> focus on what made _this_ design special.
Focus on the most interesting thing that you have added.
Show what is important, highlight some boxes, tell them the `cool stuff of the thesis.`
6) It's not given which contributions are worth more and which aren't.
At the level of the bachelor, it is typically easiest to make an impression with the experiments.
The design and implementation are unlikely the most groundbreaking part of the thesis.
Most bachelor thesis are experiment heavy, so most presentations are experiment heavy.
7) Are we given a clicker or do we plug in our own laptop?
We are plugging in our own laptop.
8) Replicate a result from a previous study to show that the system works.
Replicate an experiment!!!!!!
You can show this to the audience to show you can demonstrate your capability in the presentation.
9) Jesse strongly recommends: there should be something you are really excited about.
Whatevery you found the most enjoyable or challenging --> try to incorporate this in the presentation.
"Now we go to my favourite part".
"Now we go to the most difficult part, and I am really proud I can show you these experimental results today"
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