% $Header: /cvsroot/latex-beamer/latex-beamer/solutions/conference-talks/conference-ornate-20min.en.tex,v 1.7 2007/01/28 20:48:23 tantau Exp $ \documentclass{beamer} % This file is a solution template for: % - Talk at a conference/colloquium. % - Talk length is about 20min. % - Style is ornate. % Copyright 2004 by Till Tantau . % % In principle, this file can be redistributed and/or modified under % the terms of the GNU Public License, version 2. % % However, this file is supposed to be a template to be modified % for your own needs. For this reason, if you use this file as a % template and not specifically distribute it as part of a another % package/program, I grant the extra permission to freely copy and % modify this file as you see fit and even to delete this copyright % notice. \mode { \usetheme{Warsaw} % or ... \setbeamercovered{transparent} % or whatever (possibly just delete it) } \usepackage[english]{babel} % or whatever \usepackage[latin1]{inputenc} % or whatever \usepackage{times} \usepackage[T1]{fontenc} % Or whatever. Note that the encoding and the font should match. If T1 % does not look nice, try deleting the line with the fontenc. \title{How chip makers should (not) support Free Software} \subtitle {Avoiding earned Paper Has a Subtitle} \author{Harald Welte} \institute { hmw-consulting.de\\ gpl-violations.org\\ VIA Open Source Liaison} % - Use the \inst command only if there are several affiliations. % - Keep it simple, no one is interested in your street address. \date[NLUUG/ELCE 2008] % (optional, should be abbreviation of conference name) {Embedded Linux Conference Europe, 2008} % - Either use conference name or its abbreviation. % - Not really informative to the audience, more for people (including % yourself) who are reading the slides online \subject{Embedded Linux} % This is only inserted into the PDF information catalog. Can be left % out. % If you have a file called "university-logo-filename.xxx", where xxx % is a graphic format that can be processed by latex or pdflatex, % resp., then you can add a logo as follows: % \pgfdeclareimage[height=0.5cm]{university-logo}{university-logo-filename} % \logo{\pgfuseimage{university-logo}} % Delete this, if you do not want the table of contents to pop up at % the beginning of each subsection: \AtBeginSubsection[] { \begin{frame}{Outline} \tableofcontents[currentsection,currentsubsection] \end{frame} } % If you wish to uncover everything in a step-wise fashion, uncomment % the following command: %\beamerdefaultoverlayspecification{<+->} \begin{document} \begin{frame} \titlepage \end{frame} \begin{frame}{Outline} \tableofcontents % You might wish to add the option [pausesections] \end{frame} % Structuring a talk is a difficult task and the following structure % may not be suitable. Here are some rules that apply for this % solution: % - Exactly two or three sections (other than the summary). % - At *most* three subsections per section. % - Talk about 30s to 2min per frame. So there should be between about % 15 and 30 frames, all told. % - A conference audience is likely to know very little of what you % are going to talk about. So *simplify*! % - In a 20min talk, getting the main ideas across is hard % enough. Leave out details, even if it means being less precise than % you think necessary. % - If you omit details that are vital to the proof/implementation, % just say so once. Everybody will be happy with that. \section{Motivation} \subsection{The Basic Problem That We Studied} \begin{frame}{Make Titles Informative. Use Uppercase Letters.}{Subtitles are optional.} % - A title should summarize the slide in an understandable fashion % for anyone how does not follow everything on the slide itself. \begin{itemize} \item Use \texttt{itemize} a lot. \item Use very short sentences or short phrases. \end{itemize} \end{frame} \begin{frame}{Make Titles Informative.} You can create overlays\dots \begin{itemize} \item using the \texttt{pause} command: \begin{itemize} \item First item. \pause \item Second item. \end{itemize} \item using overlay specifications: \begin{itemize} \item<3-> First item. \item<4-> Second item. \end{itemize} \item using the general \texttt{uncover} command: \begin{itemize} \uncover<5->{\item First item.} \uncover<6->{\item Second item.} \end{itemize} \end{itemize} \end{frame} \subsection{Previous Work} \begin{frame}{Make Titles Informative.} \end{frame} \begin{frame}{Make Titles Informative.} \end{frame} \section{Our Results/Contribution} \subsection{Main Results} \begin{frame}{Make Titles Informative.} \end{frame} \begin{frame}{Make Titles Informative.} \end{frame} \begin{frame}{Make Titles Informative.} \end{frame} \subsection{Basic Ideas for Proofs/Implementation} \begin{frame}{Make Titles Informative.} \end{frame} \begin{frame}{Make Titles Informative.} \end{frame} \begin{frame}{Make Titles Informative.} \end{frame} \section*{Summary} \begin{frame}{Summary} % Keep the summary *very short*. \begin{itemize} \item The \alert{first main message} of your talk in one or two lines. \item The \alert{second main message} of your talk in one or two lines. \item Perhaps a \alert{third message}, but not more than that. \end{itemize} % The following outlook is optional. \vskip0pt plus.5fill \begin{itemize} \item Outlook \begin{itemize} \item Something you haven't solved. \item Something else you haven't solved. \end{itemize} \end{itemize} \end{frame} % All of the following is optional and typically not needed. \appendix \section*{\appendixname} \subsection*{For Further Reading} \begin{frame}[allowframebreaks] \frametitle{For Further Reading} \begin{thebibliography}{10} \beamertemplatebookbibitems % Start with overview books. \bibitem{Author1990} A.~Author. \newblock {\em Handbook of Everything}. \newblock Some Press, 1990. \beamertemplatearticlebibitems % Followed by interesting articles. Keep the list short. \bibitem{Someone2000} S.~Someone. \newblock On this and that. \newblock {\em Journal of This and That}, 2(1):50--100, 2000. \end{thebibliography} \end{frame} \end{document}