February 28, 2006

Countdown Clock For Presentations: How To Build It

When training a class or delivering a long workshop, it is always difficult to get people to come back to their desks in due time.

The same happens when assigning a test to be completed within a specified time. Missing a common shared timer for everyone, it gets a little difficult to communicate efficiently to everyone when time is really running out.

countdown_timer.gif

In these situations, what can work extremely well, is the use of a digital countdown timer to be projected on the main audience screen. In this way, you need not continuously interrupt or distract attendees to inform them of the remaining time and anyone can see at a glance how much time is left.

Here PowerPoint expert and book-writer Ellen Finkelstein gives a step-by-step tutorial on how to build such a digital countdown clock.

To get your audience to settle down before you start or for breaks, you can create a timer slide that counts down the seconds or minutes before you begin.

You can use this timer to time 60 seconds or 60 minutes (for lunch, perhaps). In fact, you can set it up for less or more; it's very flexible. For breaks, you can create a timer that runs for 15 minutes. This timer requires no code and is quick and easy to create.

Create a timer

Here you see a timer that counts down 60 seconds. Each number grows larger and changes to red, in sequence, until you get down to one. I didn't add anything else to the slide, but of course, you can add a background or anything else you want.

pptip_timer1.jpg

To avoid typing in all the numbers, I started in Excel. However, if Excel frightens you (it shouldn't), you can create a table in PowerPoint, with 10 columns and 6 rows and enter all the numbers by hand. It should take you about 60 seconds to do this, so that's not bad.

If 60 isn't the number you want, you can create a table going up to any number you want. For example, for a 15-minute break, you could create a table with 5 columns and 3 rows.

Here are the steps in Excel:

  1. In cell A1, enter 1.
  2. In cell A2, enter 2.
  3. Select both cells and point at the lower-right corner of cell A2 until you see a cross. Click and drag to the right until you have 10 total columns. (There's a little tooltip to tell you.)
  4. In cell B1, enter =A1+10 and press Enter. You should see 11 in the cell.
  5. Copy that cell to the Clipboard.
  6. Select cells B2 through B10 and paste. You should now see 11-20.
  7. Select the entire 2nd row and copy to the Clipboard.
  8. Select C1 and paste. You should see 31-40.
  9. Repeat step 9 for D1 (41-50) and E1 (51-60).
  10. Select all the numbers and change their font size to 28. (Use the Font Size drop-down list on the Formatting toolbar.)
  11. With all the numbers still selected, copy to the Clipboard.

Now open PowerPoint and follow these steps (which I did in PowerPoint 2003):

  1. Create a slide using the Title Only layout.
  2. Paste from the Clipboard. All your numbers appear on the slide.
  3. From the Drawing toolbar, choose Draw > Ungroup. At the message asking if you want to convert them to PowerPoint shapes, click Yes.
  4. Drag a selection window around all the numbers, but not the title. If necessary move the title up.
  5. Here comes a tricky part. The ungrouped table includes not only text boxes but lines for the table, and you need to delete those lines (to add an effect that works only on text). With everything selected, right-click and choose Format AutoShape. On the Colors and Lines tab, from the Line drop-down list, choose Automatic (or any visible color). Click OK.
  6. Delete the lines around the edge of the table. In my experience, there were no lines between the rows and columns.
  7. Again select all the text boxes. Now right-click and choose Format AutoShape again. Use the same technique to change the lines to None (if you don't want lines around each number's text box).
  8. With all the text boxes selected, choose Slide Show > Custom Animation to display the Custom Animation task pane.
  9. Click Add Effect.
  10. Choose the effect you want--one that shows up clearly. I chose Emphasis> Grow with Color. This adds the effect to every text box!
  11. From the Color drop-down list of the task pane, choose the color that you want. I chose Red for greatest visibility.
  12. From the Start drop-down list, choose After Previous. This makes each text box animate one after another.
  13. All your boxes are still selected. Right-click in the task pane and choose Timing. (Right-clicking lets you access the animation effect's dialog box for every selected text box.)
  14. Set the Speed to 1 Seconds (Fast). (Don't mind Microsoft's bad grammar.) For a timer that counts down every second, leave the Delay at 0. However, for a minute timer, set the Delay to 59 seconds.
  15. Click OK. You should now see the effect preview on your slide.

Try it out in slide show view! By the way, don't expect perfect accuracy. I timed my slides and after a minute it was about 2 seconds off. I thought that was acceptable. I didn't time the 1 hour timer.

If you want the timer to count from 1 to 60, instead of down, start your table with 60 at the top left and end with 1 at the bottom right. I couldn't find any way to get the animation to start at the top instead of at the bottom.

countdown_clock.gif

You may or may not want the slide to automatically go to the next slide when the timer is finished. This is up to you. If you want the slidie to advance automatically, follow these steps to add a slide transition:

  1. Choose Slide Show>Slide Transition to open the Slide Transition task pane.
  2. Choose a transition effect.
  3. In the Advance Slide section, check Automatically After and enter 1:01. This automatically advances the slide after 1 minute and 1 second, or 1 second after the timer finishes. You could set it for 60:01 for an hour timer.

Enjoy your timer!

You can use it again and again, in many situations.



This tip was inspired by several other timers:
Geetesh Bajaj's timer
Andrew May's timer
Shyam Pillai's timer

Here are links to other timers:
PTT Inc.'s Break Timer
Microsoft's timers



Original article entitled: "Create a timer"
originally written by Ellen Finkelstein



About the author
Ellen Finkelstein has been using AutoCAD since 1986 and PowerPoint since 1996. She has been consulting and teaching AutoCAD as well as other computer programs, including Microsoft Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, since 1993. Now she writes computer books and teaches Management courses. She has taught classes in Human Resource Management, Creating Usable Web Sites, and Web Writing. Some of her most current books include:

How to Do Everything with PowerPoint 2003

Syndicating Web Sites with RSS Feeds for Dummies

AutoCAD 2005 and AutoCAD LT 2005 Bible

OpenOffice.org For Dummies (with Gurdy Leete and Mary Leete)


posted by Chiara Moriconi on Tuesday, February 28 2006
Saturday, December 1 2007

URL of this article:
http://masterview.ikonosnewmedia.com/2006/02/28/countdown_clock_for_presentations_how.htm


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