i'd actually already looked at those (should have said, sorry) - they're 
longer than what i was needing, but i could pick a few slides.  i just 
wondered if what i was doing (basically, selling to scientific programmers 
in < 10 mins) was a common task.

andrew

On Tuesday, 8 September 2015 18:18:25 UTC-3, Jeffrey Sarnoff wrote:
>
> Here is one place to look svaksha's list of slide presentations 
> <https://github.com/svaksha/Julia.jl/blob/master/Resources.md#slides>.
>
> For those who may not be familiar with details of copyright 
>     (a) written material is copyrighted even when there is no formal 
> copyright statement
>     (b) it is the responsibility of the person who wants to use the 
> material to get the author's permission
>             (sometimes that permission may accompany the material, e.g. 
> "this material is placed in the public domain", or with some other 
> permissive language)
>     (c) when using another person's written work, cite the person and 
> identify the work so others can find it if they want
>
> The Julia community is more helpful and supportive than most; so, go ahead 
> and ask, and let the person know you would cite their work.
>
>
> On Tuesday, September 8, 2015 at 4:58:33 PM UTC-4, andrew cooke wrote:
>>
>>
>> I need to give a presentation at work and was wondering is slides already 
>> exist that:
>>
>>   * show how fast it is in benchmarks
>>
>>   * show that it's similar to matlab (matrix stuff)
>>
>>   * show that you can write fast inner loops
>>
>>  For bonus points:
>>
>>   * show how you can add other numerical types at no "cost"
>>
>>   * show how mutiple dispatch can be useful
>>
>>   * show how someone used to OO in, say, python, won't feel too lost
>>
>> Preferably just one slide per point.  Very short.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Andrew
>>
>>

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