Now, I am ready to display each slide and free to annotate, draw, illustrate to my heart’s content. When it came time for class, I used the share desktop feature in my conference room, opened the browser and loaded AirSketch into it. Next in AirSketch, I loaded the photos as the background and saved them in the correct order of my presentation. I created a bunch of blank slides with headers and saved them all to Photos. If there was text I could add them otherwise I just left the space blank so I can use AirSketch to illustrate my points later. Using Drawing Pad, I loaded a fun background and used a brush to write my slide heading. How can these two apps replace PowerPoint? Remember, I said I was not working on the computer but I still wanted something that look like slides. AirSketch is essentially a whiteboard type application but it has a neat feature that allows you to broadcast your whiteboard locally so anyone in your office can just pull up a web browser, type in the IP address for the app and voila! Everything you draw or write shows up on their browser. She absolutely adores it and despite my challenge with drawing and graphics I love doodling on it too. One of them – believe it or not – is an app I bought for my daughter. ![]() So, I pulled out the iPad, got cozy on the bed and fired up two apps. After a long day this week, I decided to tear myself away from the desk but alas, there was preparation for our tech training class to be done.
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