Speaker notes the audience can't see.
Every presenter has the same horror story. Presenter view leaks onto the shared screen. The printout is on the wrong slide. The second monitor isn't connected. The notes you wrote at midnight are now visible to the prospect. We fixed it.
AI factory in a 6U rack.
8 × NVIDIA H100 SXM5 · 900 GB/s NVLink
What the room sees
The deck. Full bleed. Animated. Dell-branded. Nothing else.
Talk track · Slide 11 / 32
02:14 / 18:00
Open"Six rack units. Eight H100s. This is the rack you order."
CueHold on the rack render. Two-second beat. Let the LEDs blink.
Stat"9.4× the throughput of V100. Same rack space."
If askedPower: 10.2 kW peak · Memory: 2 TB DDR5 · Ships H1 2024.
What you see
Invisible to the share. PIN-protected. Synced to whatever slide is on screen.
From the engagementUsed at AWS re:Invent 2023, on the Dell partner roadshow across 14 countries, and in 47 one-to-one CTO briefings. Presenters never alt-tabbed; the audience never saw a notes app.
The detail
Nobody else does this.
PowerPoint's presenter view is a single application window. The moment you share a monitor instead of a window, the whole presenter view broadcasts. Every sales team has done it. Most have done it more than once.
Keynote, Google Slides, Gamma, Tome and Beautiful.ai all share the same flaw or don't ship presenter notes at all.
Our talk track is a separate browser window with its own URL and its own PIN. You open it on a phone, a tablet or a second monitor. It listens to the deck and advances with it. The audience can never see it because it isn't part of the shared window.
Brief us