PowerPoint Makes You Dumb
This year, Edward Tufte -- the famous
theorist of information presentation -- made precisely that argument in a
blistering screed called The Cognitive Style of PowerPoint. In his slim 28-page
pamphlet, Tufte claimed that Microsoft's ubiquitous software forces people to
mutilate data beyond comprehension. For example, the low resolution of a
PowerPoint slide means that it usually contains only about 40 words, or barely
eight seconds of reading. PowerPoint also encourages users to rely on bulleted
lists, a ''faux analytical'' technique, Tufte wrote, that dodges the speaker's
responsibility to tie his information together. And perhaps worst of all is how
PowerPoint renders charts. Charts in newspapers like The Wall Street Journal
contain up to 120 elements on average, allowing readers to compare large
groupings of data. But, as Tufte found, PowerPoint users typically produce
charts with only 12 elements. Ultimately, Tufte concluded, PowerPoint is infused
with ''an attitude of commercialism that turns everything into a sales pitch.''
Microsoft officials, of
course, beg to differ. Simon Marks, the product manager for PowerPoint, counters
that Tufte is a fan of ''information density,'' shoving tons of data at an
audience. You could do that with PowerPoint, he says, but it's a matter of
choice. ''If people were told they were going to have to sit through an
incredibly dense presentation,'' he adds, ''they wouldn't want it.'' And
PowerPoint still has fans in the highest corridors of power: Colin Powell used a
slideware presentation in February when he made his case to the United Nations
that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction.
Of course, given that the
weapons still haven't been found, maybe Tufte is onto something. Perhaps
PowerPoint is uniquely suited to our modern age of obfuscation -- where
manipulating facts is as important as presenting them clearly. If you have
nothing to say, maybe you need just the right tool to help you not say it.
From the NYTimes
Why did the Shuttle
crash? Because PowerPoint makes you
dumb. In August, the Columbia
Accident Investigation Board at NASA released Volume 1 of its report on why the
space shuttle crashed. As expected, the ship's foam insulation was the main
cause of the disaster. But the board also fingered another unusual culprit:
PowerPoint, Microsoft's well-known ''slideware'' program.
NASA, the board argued, had
become too reliant on presenting complex information via PowerPoint, instead of
by means of traditional ink-and-paper technical reports. When NASA engineers
assessed possible wing damage during the mission, they presented the findings in
a confusing PowerPoint slide -- so crammed with nested bullet points and
irregular short forms that it was nearly impossible to untangle. ''It is easy to
understand how a senior manager might read this PowerPoint slide and not realize
that it addresses a life-threatening situation,'' the board sternly noted.
PowerPoint is the world's
most popular tool for presenting information. There are 400 million copies in
circulation, and almost no corporate decision takes place without it. But what
if PowerPoint is actually making us stupider?
Posted: Sat
- December
13, 2003 at 08:26 PM