![]() One benefit is that you can use bluetooth or wireless and walk anywhere in the classroom while controlling the presentation. However, if you have an iPhone, can present from another iOS device and don't mind the translation limitations - this is a fabulous and very robust presentation solution. (Worse - not all the limitations/bugs in translation are documented at the prior link) The presentation plays on the connected screen, and the presenter display shows on your device. iOS Keynote is not as capable as Mac Keynote and many transitions are dumbed down or not at all possible. Table of Contents Play a presentation on a separate display in Keynote on iPad To show your presentation on a separate screen, connect your device to an external display, a projector, or Apple TV with AirPlay.If you’re presenting on an external display, you can refer to your presenter notes during your presentation when you set up the presenter display to show presenter notes. Yes, there is a $200 adapter for just about anything - but this cost is not trivial for most in education. Table of Contents Add and view presenter notes in Keynote on Mac You can add notes to any slide to help you present. Potentially problems driving the projector - Macs can drive more legacy video formats than iOS can with adapters. ![]() ![]() Added time to sync the presentation to iOS.You now need two devices - a pair of iPod touches or a combination of iPad / iPhone / iPod so that you can have one driving the display and the other as a remote to control the presentation.This has several disadvantages - one of which is not obvious and continually irks me (the undocumented translation bugs). There are two ways to play a Keynote presentation on your Mac: Present in full screen: Shows the current slide on your primary display while the presenter display, with your notes and controls, is hidden. I really like the way Keynote and MS Office (and also OpenOffice & similar) support a presentation mode that displays the current slide, the next (and maybe previous) slide, the elapsed and current time, and also any notes attached to the slides on one screen and the presentation itself on the beamer/second screen. The only solution I have found that's remotely workable is to augment your hardware list and use iOS to present the keynote so your computer is free to assist your teaching without interrupting the display of the keynote. ![]()
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