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Feb 28, 2023 at 15:24 comment added Wastrel You could present a live YouTube video lecture, with annotations on a blackboard or whiteboard, but you would need a production crew and at least two cameras. You'd probably have to practice the presentation with the crew as well. I'm sure this is impractically expensive for you, but there are YouTube channels that do this.
Feb 27, 2023 at 13:43 comment added Duyal Yolcu Thanks for that hint... If you have time: Were these documents specially prepared for the lecture? I'll be careful that I don't need to "wildly scroll around", but the formatting is so that pressing the "down key' once corresponds to what would be one more bullet point in a slides presentation. I'll maybe try the google docs copy-paste thing then. I would just really like to recreate the writing-on-blackboard experience, I personally don't like slides very much either (being in the audience).
Feb 27, 2023 at 13:12 comment added Jochen Glueck @DuY: I don't have time right now to right a full answer, but I would strongly recommend not to scroll through a document in order to present a talk. I've seen this a number of times (while I was out in the audience, either onsite or online) and in most cases it turned out to be a really bad experience.
Feb 27, 2023 at 13:02 comment added Duyal Yolcu Thank you for that link, but my setting is a live lecture, not a prepared YouTube video - so I would like the reader to have access to a larger quantity of information than fits on one screen. I think the solution that I'll probably use is to scan the writeup I have and OCR it as far as it makes sense, share the entire scan with everyone in the beginning, and then just scroll in the notes and share my screen.
Feb 27, 2023 at 11:58 history answered CrimsonDark CC BY-SA 4.0