As much as you may hate Powerpoint presentations, sometimes you can’t avoid them — especially if they’re crucial to your business. Now Brainshark is bringing its popular Slideshark app to the iPhone, which will further the company’s mission to take the pain out of presentations.
[aditude-amp id="flyingcarpet" targeting='{"env":"staging","page_type":"article","post_id":525439,"post_type":"story","post_chan":"none","tags":null,"ai":false,"category":"none","all_categories":"business,mobile,","session":"A"}']Just like on the iPad, the iPhone app lets you view Powerpoint presentations stored in Slideshark’s cloud service. It’s particularly useful for having continual access to presentations as they’re updated, and sending them to large screens to share with a group (either via adapters or streaming via AirPlay to an Apple TV). Now, you can pitch your slide deck right from your pocket.
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Brainshark’s claim to fame is its cloud-based video presentation solution, but the company ended up releasing SlideShark on the iPad last fall to give consumers a way to accurately view PowerPoint slides while on the go. It made sense for Brainshark to offer some sort of PowerPoint solution — it’s a presentation standard that likely won’t disappear anytime soon, and it can serve as a gateway to the company’s video presentation service.
The Slideshark iPad app has been downloaded twice a minute every day since its launch, the company says, and it boasts users in more than 120 countries. (The PowerPoint curse has no language barriers, it seems.)
“People wanted the iPhone app more as a backup device,” Zimmerman said. Still, that doesn’t mean the app was an afterthought. The company has been working on the app for the past four-and-a-half months, according to Brainshark senior product manager David Klein. In particular, it took some time to figure out how to translate Slideshark’s user interface to the iPhone, which has far less screen space than the iPad.
While you can’t actually make edits to slides with the Slideshark iPhone app, Brainshark is eventually planning to add note taking and annotation capabilities.
“We want to be a presenter’s best friend, not an authoring tool on mobile devices,” Zimmerman said.
Waltham, MA-based Brainshark was founded in 1999 and last took funding in 2005.
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Presentation photo via Shutterstock
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