HaikuDeck is a relatively new tool for the iPad that is attracting lots of attention. You don't need an iPad though to browse around the site to find reusable "Decks."
This first one, created by Fiona Walker, includes both slides and text in the sidebar. Click on the HaikuDeck icon at the bottom of the slide to view the Deck on the site to see the sidebar notes.
Created with Haiku Deck, the free presentation app for iPad
Here is another HaikuDeck, created by JD Doctolero, with the notes. Click on HaikuDeck icon to view at the site for the notes to be viewable. In this blog post, you can only see part of the presentation. The way HaikuDeck works is that if you want someone to see the notes, the deck needs to be viewed live right at the site.
Created with Haiku Deck, the free presentation app for iPad
This deck, created by Susan Spellman Cann, is an excellent example of HaikuDeck's visual power.
Created with Haiku Deck, the free presentation app for iPad
Here's one by Sam Patterson, a California high school educator, which I caught on his blog,
Be the Distraction. He also maintains another blog,
The Paperless Classroom. In fact, he recently on April 13 posted "
Why Teachers Should Blog."
Created with Haiku Deck, the free presentation app for iPad
Educators using HaikuDeck boast about its focus on the visual and the fact that
images have a Creative Commons license "free to use."
What do you see as the potential of using HaikuDeck in your professional work or in the classroom? Even if you don't have an iPad, keep in mind you can visit the site and find Decks to use, as I have in this post. How might HaikuDeck offer some advantages that other presentation tools such as PowerPoint or Prezi don't offer?