I certainly recogise the problem. Many (bad) presenters
will talk while things automagically happen on the
projector and the audience has no clue how.
However, I really hope your solution isn't widely
adopted. The problem above is a presenter problem and
nothing more. When demonstrating, one should "speak" the
shortcut keystrokes rather than expect the audience to
either know already or worst expect them to keep their
eyes on both the real subject matter and another window
that shows keystrokes, IMO.
Hi there,
Looks handy for presentations. Great stuff.
Regards,
Chua Wen Ching
Could be amusing if you're using ViEmu for VS.NET!
I use SharpDevelop mainly for development. Visual Studio
is no longer installed :)
in case of you think what app your watcher might
watch... ;)
Cool. This is a great idea for pair programming, too!
Sweet idea, very good, I think it will come in handy
right away!
great idea, so now normal people can follow better what
keyboard freaks like our selves do =o)
Go on then, what's nasty about the old name?
Short-watcher: watching someone's shorts..
Thanks Roy.
Great idea.
I think it is also intersting for PairProgramming and
maybe also with a little adoption, for distributed
pairprogramming.