Demos and Presentations

 

Whether you're giving a proposal to NASA on your plans for the next generation space telescope, or just showing your friends the highlights of tonight's sky, Starry Night is the perfect presentation tool. It's interface has been designed to make it easy for you to quickly open prepared files, or to change the entire look of the program with just a drag and drop.


Example files

Creating example files is easy -- just set up the view you like, then Save (or Save As) to a location on your computer. To open an example file, open it from the File menu, double-click on its icon, or drag and drop it into any open Starry Night window.

Making an example file preserves all aspects of your view, including the time flow. If, when you save, time is flowing at any rate or direction, the file will record it. Upon opening the file, time will automatically be flowing. This can prove handy during a presentation, since you won't have to use the Time Palette to get time flowing: just drag and drop the file and away it goes.

By creating a folder of your example files and placing it on your desktop, your entire presentation can be just a drag and drop away.


Option sets

Option sets can also be saved and opened in a fashion similar to example files. This makes it easier for you to switch quickly between a variety of custom settings.

To create a new option set, open a Starry Night window and set your options as desired. Then, in the Settings menu, choose "Save Options As...". Name your option set, and save it to the Options folder (Windows) or Options Sets folder (Macintosh). You can now select it by choosing "Use Options" from the Settings menu any time you want to quickly change to those settings.

  • Shortcut: A particularly handy trick if you're using Starry Night in a presentation and want to change settings quickly is to drag and drop option sets. Open Option folder, and create a Shortcut (Windows) or alias (Macintosh) of it. Keep the shortcut/alias on your desktop, and when you want to switch between sets, drag and drop the individual option sets onto an active window. The window will immediately adjust itself to reflect the new option settings.


Multiple windows

The ability to open multiple windows in Starry Night can provide your audience with breathtaking views of the Solar System. If you want to quickly open multiple windows, just drag and drop files onto Starry Night's application icon.

For an example of how to use multiple windows to view an eclipse from three different locations simultaneously, see the chapter "Working With Multiple Windows".


Removing scrollbars

You can turn off the scrollbars by selecting the Scrollbars command in the Window menu. Since you can navigate within a window so easily with the hand grabber tool, some people like to turn off the scrollbars for aesthetic reasons, especially during a presentation. Selecting the command again will toggle the scrollbars back on.


QuickTime movies

The Movie tool can be used to make spectacular movies of any Starry Night view. These can played back using any QuickTime viewer, so you can use Starry Night movies on almost any computer. The Movie tool lets you record a graphically intensive event (such as a planet flyby) and play it back as a gorgeously smooth QuickTime. Even a slow computer can take all the time it wants to render a screen update, record it as a movie frame, and then work on the next screen. Once the recording is finished, you can use it in your presentation. Your audience will then be able to view the event faster and smoother as a movie.

For more information on movies, please the chapter Making Movies.


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Page last modified on: January 25, 1999