Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from October, 2024

3D AI Avatar: A New Way of Interaction Brought by Slides Orator

 After months of dedicated work, we're excited to introduce our AI interactive software - Slides Orator. This innovative presentation software combines AI with 3D Avatars to redefine how we engage with our audience. It not only makes presentations more dynamic and engaging but also transforms each presentation into a perfect interactive experience through AI technology. The Magic of 3D AI Avatars At the heart of Slides Orator lies its 3D AI Avatars - these aren't just static images, but intelligent entities capable of responding to audience questions in real-time. By simply uploading a frontal face photo, Slides Orator's AI technology creates a lifelike 3D avatar with a realistic style, presenting with natural movements and expressions. Transforming PDFs from Static to Dynamic Traditional presentations often lack interactivity, but Slides Orator's 3D AI Avatars change this paradigm. These virtual avatars can express natural body language, respond to voice commands,

From Text to Dialogue: How Slides Orator is Revolutionizing Presentation Interaction

In the digital transformation wave led by artificial intelligence, we are experiencing a profound shift in communication paradigms.  The emergence of Slides Orator represents not just a technological innovation, but a complete reconstruction of traditional information delivery methods, transforming the essence of slide presentations and pioneering a new model of human-machine interaction. Current Challenges in Traditional Presentation Paradigms Traditional presentation methods, which rely on in-person speeches or live interactions, face several communication limitations: Cognitive Gaps Natural cognitive differences exist between speakers' expression and audience comprehension, leading to understanding discrepancies in the short-term Standardized presentation content struggles to meet the needs of audiences at different levels of understanding In one-way communication, knowledge absorption often remains superficial. The lack of immediate feedback mechanisms makes it difficult t