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To formulate infographic prompts: 1. Choose a clear topic 2. Identify key data points 3. Specify visual elements 4. Define audience 5. Set tone and style 6. Include call-to-action 7. Keep it concise and focused Example: "Create an infographic on climate change impacts. Include global temperature rise, sea level increase, and extreme weather events. Use icons and a color gradient from blue to red. Target general public. Style: modern and urgent. CTA: 'Act Now'"
Have you ever tried to click on the CC button on the video? Then you can get sub text and read instead... But I guess you then will complain about your dyslexia 😅😅
@@jwtechbytes I agree. However, after 5 papers of 1000 to 2000 words, I was not able to add citations relevant to my research. I will be loading my own PDFs tomorrow and hopefully, that might be helpful. I will keep you updated.
@@jwtechbytes Hi, firstly, thank you for the informative video. I uploaded my own PDF files that I use for my research, and the PDF files were cited as per the MLA referencing. The outlay of the statement was well constructed, and I have a well-written statement with citations that are relevant to the research paper saving me hours to browse the PDF files.
I was hoping to find out if those textbox links can be changed. I had to insert a page between so I needed to adjust the textbox flow. It seems my only option is to try to delete the text box pointing to what is now the wrong location and see if that will do the trick. Otherwise, great presentation. Thanks
We would be incredibly grateful to receive a complimentary upgraded account, allowing us to delve deeper into the vast capabilities of Julius AI and showcase its transformative potential to our audience.
Cool idea and I tried generating UML sequence diags with Bard and Plantuml. I also tried it with chat GTP (plantuml and mermaid). In both cases they failed to use the UML ALT syntax correctly (until prompted). There were a few other things that needed work as well. So if I am designing a new process I am guessing it would be easier to write it down in mermaid or plantuml DSL than trying to iterate on an AI prompt to do that for me?
Thanks for giving it a try @alecclews! You make some fair critiques. AI still has room for improvement when it comes to niche syntax like UML. For now, you're likely right that for detailed technical diagrams, manually writing mermaid or plantuml is more reliable. But I'm hopeful AI capabilities will continue advancing over time.
@keynahkareem7879, please go back to chatGPT and type "I am getting this error .....(state the error)". It will rewrite the code correctly and you can go back and overwrite the old one and run again. Let me know if you hit a snag 😊
great video thanks, if you would like something more powerful and flexible, there is an opensource Python tool that uses gpt and makes powerpoint slides. it's highly customizable and can basically take a 100 page word report or document and make a well organized presentation out of it. Full demo in my videos and the demo itself is creative commons and reuse allowed.
Yes, sure you can. You just need to describe the process to ChatGPT and tell it to create mermaid code for it and paste the code. Make sure your prompt to ChatGPT is specific and detailed to give it enough context in what you intend to achieve