Citations:PowerPoint


 * 2004, Danny Gregory, Change Your Underwear Twice a Week, Lessons from the Golden Age of the Classroom Filmstrips, Artisan Books, ISBN 1579652638, illustrated, page 18:
 * In time, the glass gave way to celluloid, and the images became photos. Businesses used them to train workers and managers—they were the PowerPoint of their day.
 * 2006, Crystal Downing, How Postmodernism Serves (My) Faith, Questioning Truth in Language, Philosophy and Art, InterVarsity Press, ISBN 0830827587, illustrated, page 30:
 * Flannelgraph was the PowerPoint of midcentury Christian education. Television-sized pieces of flannel were layered over each other and stapled to the top of an easel board, each piece printed with a different background scene
 * 2007, David A. Davis, A Kingdom We Can Taste, Sermons for the Church Year, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, ISBN 0802827470, page 32:
 * The familiar scene splashes on to the PowerPoint of our imagination.
 * 2007, David Shenk, The Immortal Game, A History of Chess Or How 32 Carved Pieces on a Board Illuminated Our Understanding of War, Art, Science, and the Human Brain, Random House, ISBN 1400034086, unpaged:
 * Chess was, in a sense, medieval presentation software—the PowerPoint of the Middle Ages.
 * 2008, M A Sherif, The Abdullah Yusuf Ali Memorial Lecture, Islamic Book Trust, The Other Press, ISBN 9675062193, page 8:
 * The talk was entitled 'The Indian Muhammedans: their past, present and future' and included lantern slides – the PowerPoint of its day – depicting prominent Muslim personalities