tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2921204464153090246.post7862882569505231177..comments2023-05-12T08:27:11.739+02:00Comments on Better Scientific Presentations: On why I hate LaTeX/BeamerJuan Pablo Amorocho D.http://www.blogger.com/profile/07542109926014302195noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2921204464153090246.post-81256472153809176592016-07-03T15:00:31.781+02:002016-07-03T15:00:31.781+02:00I agree that in a math presentations theorems have...I agree that in a math presentations theorems have a big role. The question is how you present them. As University of Manchester Mathematics Professor Nicholas Higham in "Handbook of Writing for the Mathemetical sciences write" writes "When you write a slide, aim for economy of words. Chop sentences mercilessly to leave the bare minimum that is readily comprehensible." Think about it, people may take their theorems directly out of their latex articles and dump them into their beamer slides without further thought. That is that Beamer fosters, but ultimately it Beamer is just a tool. As I wrote on the post, the responsibility lies on the person using it.Juan Pablo Amorocho D.https://www.blogger.com/profile/07542109926014302195noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2921204464153090246.post-41556892845442297182016-06-03T07:27:24.430+02:002016-06-03T07:27:24.430+02:00We have to think something about the theorem issue...We have to think something about the theorem issue. If it is a mathematical presentation, the most important contribution is indeed a theorem. Think about a math thesis presentation: most results will be theorems :(Freddy Lopezhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04560516889321267412noreply@blogger.com