When you boldly smash advance to jump to a totally new slide containing uncast ballots (something akin to "What should we do with the corporate budgets?"), the giant projection screen strongly aids your efforts by prominently rendering the prompt... but deliberately conceals the actual numeric percentages securely behind locked bars.
Your ultimate objective as the designated presenter is graciously affording ample time for your voters to deliberate. Once you physically witness the room concluding their voting onslaught and you deeply sense the emotional timing has ripened: firmly tap "Next" once again. The massive bars will mechanically burst open progressively revealing exactly which coveted option triumphed, masterfully generating potent atmosphere and devastating impact. If you mercilessly repeatedly tap next proceeding this climax, you will permanently abandon the current question entirely traversing towards the subsequent slide.
> Purely chaotic static modes such as "Multiple Word Storm" along with the "Q&A Wall" completely bypass this philosophy, instantly animating floating words and text cards plunging relentlessly across the live feed constantly fueling audience participation while the ticking clock runs without demanding any magical secondary button triggers from you.
Exclusively owing its existence to simply being an immortal Internet URL, the UpVoter Projection Window inherently boasts sweeping compatibility across virtually any hardware imaginable: standard Smart TVs, iPads aggressively beamed via AirPlay, Google Chromecasts... You effortlessly construct your own ideal stage landscape.
You hold absolute freedom to aggressively force (embed) this unbridled visual url purely within your company's native Intranet via an iFrame devoid of crippling corporate firewalls interrupting your display, consequently keeping the glowing results persistently visible to the entire office floor unconditionally 24/7.
Assuming your exhaustive agenda heavily leans on a massive open Q&A volley and you pragmatically wield at least two massive projectors or oversized televisions, you inherently possess the technical prowess enabling you to violently fracture the two experiences apart. You casually execute the methodical polling slides from a standard browser tab governed by your reliable clicker... while on the entirely separate secondary television you maliciously trigger the dedicated "Q&A Mode" button.
This monumental mode permanently transmutes that extremely specific television screen into a continuously scrolling exclusive wall purely harboring authorized audience doubts brutally filtered by moderation teams. The inquiry cards will relentlessly swell and gracefully shrink intelligently adapting their physical fonts dynamically furnishing absolute supreme sovereign control encapsulating the totality of the sprawling event safely from your grip.
Tags: projection, tv, big-screen, animations, suspense, presenter