Prezi

Prezi
Type of site
Presentation Collaboration
Available in English, Portuguese, Spanish, Korean, Japanese, German, Italian, French, Hungarian
Founder(s) Adam Somlai-Fischer
Peter Halacsy
Peter Arvai
Website www.prezi.com
Launched April 5, 2009 (2009-04-05)
Current status Active

Prezi is a visual storytelling software alternative to traditional slide-based presentation formats. Prezi presentations feature a map-like, schematic overview that lets users pan between topics at will, zoom in on desired details, and pull back to reveal context.

This freedom of movement enables “conversational presenting,” a new presentation style in which presentations follow the flow of dialogue, instead of vice-versa.

Founded in 2009, and with offices in San Francisco, Budapest, and Mexico City, Prezi now fosters a community of over 75 million users with more than 260 million prezis around the world.

The company launched Prezi Business in 2016, with a suite of creation, collaboration, and analytics tools for teams. Prezi Business is an HTML5 application that runs on JavaScript.

The word Prezi is the short form of “presentation” in Hungarian.

History

Prezi (or Prezi.com) was created by the support of Kitchen Budapest and Magyar Telekom in 2008 in order to replace ordinary slide-based presentations. Today the project is assisted by Sunstone Capital.[1][2] The actual development was done by Zui Labs led by its three Hungarian founders Péter Árvai, Szabolcs Somlai-Fischer and Péter Halácsy. The word prezi is the Hungarian short form of presentation.

Products and features

Prezi Path Tool

Prezi ZUI

The Prezi online and offline ZUI editors employ a common tool palette, allowing users to pan and zoom, and to size, rotate, or edit an object. The user places objects on a canvas and navigates between videos, images, texts and other presentation media. Frames allow grouping of presentation media together as a single presentation object. Paths are navigational sequences that connect presentation objects for the purposes of structuring a linear presentation.

Prezi Desktop

Prezi Desktop[3] allows Prezi Pro or Edu Pro subscribers to work off-line and create and save their presentations on their own Windows or Mac systems. Prezi Desktop Editor allows users to work on the presentation off-line in a .pez file format. Users can have files up to 500 MB in size when signing up with a school-affiliated e-mail address. This storage capability doesn't affect when users use an appropriate third-party conversion software with FLV or SWF format.[4]

Prezi Collaborate

Prezi Collaborate is an online collaboration feature that allows up to ten people (co-located or geographically separated) to co-edit and show their presentations in real time. Users participate in a prezi simultaneously, and each is visually represented in the presentation window by a small avatar. Although Prezi Meetings can be done simultaneously, that is not the only option. Participants can be invited to edit the Prezi presentation at a later time if they wish. A link will be sent and the participant has up to ten days to edit the presentation. Prezi Meeting is included in all license types.

Prezi Viewer for iPad

Prezi Viewer[5] is an app developed for the iPad for viewing prezis created on one's Prezi online account. The iPad touchscreen and multi-touch user interface enables users to pan, and pinch to zoom in or out of their media.

Prezzip also offers templates for PreziU, with tool kits and visuals for file presentations.[6][7]

Revenue model

Prezi uses the freemium model. Customers who use the product's Public license must publish their work on the Prezi.com website, which is publicly viewable. Customers who pay for a Prezi Enjoy or Prezi Pro can make their presentations private. Only Pro license users have access to Prezi Desktop, which enables offline editing. Prezi also offers an educational license for students and educators.

Uses

Business and conferences

Some users at the World Economic Forum are currently using Prezi for their presentations.[8] Many TED Conference speakers have used Prezi, including TED curator Chris Anderson, who used a Prezi for his TEDGlobal 2010 presentation: How Web Video Powers Global Innovation.[9] Michael Chasen, President/CEO of Blackboard, Inc., used Prezi to deliver the keynote at their BbWorld 2011 annual users' conference.[10] FBLA members have recently started using this software.

Education

Prezi is used at Oregon State University,[11] as well as at the Dwight School[12] and elsewhere in primary education and higher education.[13] It can be used by teachers and students to collaborate on presentations with multiple users able to access and edit the same presentation,[14] and to allow students to construct and present their knowledge in different learning styles.[15] The product is also being used in e-learning and edutainment.[16] However note that Prezi is considered by Web2Access to be an 'inaccessible service'.[17] Educators have been advised that Prezi is not ADA/508 compliant and that an accessible PowerPoint version of the presentation should be provided online for students where a Prezi has been used.[18]

Information visualization

In July 2011, The Guardian used Prezi to publish a new world map graphic on their website, for an article about the newly independent South Sudan.[19]

Platform compatibility

Prezi is developed in Adobe Flash, Adobe AIR and built on top of Django. It is therefore compatible with most modern computers and web browsers. However, it does not comply with web standards, since it is still necessary to install the Adobe Flash plug-in.

From July 2014 viewing Prezis is also possible without Adobe Flash, using only Javascript.[20]

Criticism

Compost Basket - Prezi HQ

The company has acknowledged that the “zooming user interface (ZUI)” has the potential to induce nausea, and offers tutorials with recommendations for use of layout to avoid excessive visual stimulation.[21] There has also been criticism of Prezi’s lack of font and color options. Notably, Presentation Zen author Garr Reynolds once stated that he had never seen a good presentation using Prezi and was looking for one;[22] in a later post, he refers to Chris Anderson’s talk at TED Global 2010 as one of the best TED talks ever, commenting that it was a good use of Prezi.[23]

As Prezi is a Flash-based online zooming tool, most elements of the presentation cannot be read aloud by users with disabilities by means of a screen reader (e.g. it is not possible to add alt attributes to images and iframes used for the page design, and templates have been built to work without accessibility options). Prezi is considered by Web2Access to be an 'inaccessible service'.[24] American educators have been advised that Prezi is not compliant with the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA/508) and that an accessible PowerPoint version of the presentation should be provided online for students where a Prezi has been used.[25]

See also

References

  1. "Prezi has been funded by Sunstone Capital" (Blog). Prezi. 21 July 2009. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  2. "Prezi Press Kit" (PDF) (Press release). Sunstone Capital. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  3. "Desktop". Prezi. Retrieved 2012-06-05.
  4. "Desktop". Prezi. Retrieved 2012-07-23.
  5. "Viewer for iPad". Prezi. Retrieved 2012-06-05.
  6. "Prezi iPad viewer". Prezzip. Retrieved 25 July 2012.
  7. "what we do". Prezzip. Retrieved 2012-07-25.
  8. "zoomintoprezi - Latest - How to create a good prezi - World Economic Forum". Blog.prezi.com. 2009-11-03. Retrieved 2012-06-05.
  9. "Chris Anderson: How YouTube is driving innovation". YouTube. 2010-09-14. Retrieved 2015-05-06.
  10. "BbWorld 2011 Corporate Keynote". YouTube. 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2012-06-05.
  11. not fuly true. should expand further. "Prezi in the classroom". Oregon University State University calendar. Retrieved 2012-07-24.
  12. Anderson, Jenny (2011-06-21). "At Dwight School, Virtual Learning and the Rock - NYTimes.com". Manhattan (NYC): Cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2012-06-05.
  13. Zoltan Radnai. "Prezi makes you stop and think". Prezi. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
  14. Tilt. "Student Web 2.0". YouTube. Retrieved 2012-07-18.
  15. "Thinking outside of slide" (PDF). NACTA. Retrieved 24 July 2012.
  16. "Daniel Gallichan - 1. Platz beim 1. Freiburger Science Slam". YouTube. Retrieved 2012-06-05.
  17. "Results for Prezi". Web2Access JISC TechDis. Retrieved 2014-03-01.
  18. "Prezi Known Accessibility Issues". George Mason University. Retrieved 2014-03-01.
  19. Simon Rogers, Jenny Ridley (2011-07-08). "The new world map: download it for yourself | World news | guardian.co.uk". London: Guardian. Retrieved 2012-06-05.
  20. Peter Halacsy (2014-07-01). "How and why Prezi turned to JavaScript - and why it took four years". Prezi. Retrieved 2014-07-04.
  21. "Why the Best Prezis use Grouping & Layering | Prezi Learn Center". Prezi.com. Retrieved 2012-06-05.
  22. "Have you ever seen a great talk given with the help of Prezi? Do you have a link? - Garr's posterous". Garr.posterous.com. 2010-09-10. Archived from the original on April 2, 2012. Retrieved 2012-06-05.
  23. "On train to Tokyo watching one of the best TED talks ever - Garr's posterous". Garr.posterous.com. 2010-09-14. Archived from the original on April 2, 2012. Retrieved 2012-06-05.
  24. "Results for Prezi". Web2Access JISC TechDis. Retrieved 2014-03-01.
  25. "Accessibility Concerns of Using Prezi in Education". Barry Dahl. Retrieved 2015-10-07.
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