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Where does the use of "deck" to mean "set of slides" come from?

English Language & Usage Asked on August 13, 2021

Nowadays, the word deck can be used to refer to a set of slides (e.g., PowerPoint slides). Where does that sense come from? Online Etymology Dictionary didn’t yield any insight on it.

4 Answers

A couple of slide decks:

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A card deck:

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Correct answer by Hot Licks on August 13, 2021

Apparently the term was derived from the expression “a deck of playing cards” as suggested in the following extract:

A slide deck is just another way to refer to a presentation deck or pitch deck. The term was perhaps first used in Silicon Valley.

As a little bit of history and to clarify on the above, the term slide deck comes from old technology. It goes back to times when we used those old slide projectors facing a wall. For those machines to work, the slides piled up as cards, just like a deck of cards.

(slidebean.com)

Answered by user 66974 on August 13, 2021

The definition as a deck of cards is older (1593 Shakespeare King Henry IV is the earliest citation found):

Alas, that Warwicke had no more fore‑cast, But whiles he thought to steale the single Ten, The King was slyly finger'd from the Deck: You left poore Henry at the Bishops Pallace, And tenne to one you'le meet him in the Tower.

..than the more general definition as "a pile of things laid flat upon each other" (1625) (image from the OED):

enter image description here

Incidentally, we referred to stacks of computer punch cards (Hollerith cards) as "decks" in the 1970s.

Like many other terms, "deck" was extended to apply to virtual stacks.

In the nautical sense (as a covering) it's older again and thought to come from Flemish or Low German. In modern Dutch "dekbed" is a bed covering (a duvet).

Answered by Spehro Pefhany on August 13, 2021

Been doing powerpoints for years as an analyst. First time I ever heard them called "slide decks" was when I started hanging out with marketers. Then in college (went back to college in my late 30's to get bach/masters), I took grad-level marketing analytics classes. Again, prof called them "slide decks". No other professor or class called them "decks".

So, my idea is that marketers used to show up to presentations with posterboard decks they'd put on easels to do a presentation. They'd have an art dept put together their "deck", and they'd cycle through it as they did the presentation.

Then powerpoint came along, and they could do these decks in ppt as a slide show instead.

Marketing & Sales depts tends to be the hip, buzzword generators of the corporate world, constantly finding new, cool lingo to use to sell folks on ideas. So, my feeling is that marketers used the term "slide deck" enough to refer to powerpoint presentations that other dept's adopted the saying.

Back out in the working world, I noticed "slide deck" is used more often now. College profs usually head into college and isolate from the working world, so they dont' keep up with lingo. So, only marketer types are hip to the "slide deck" trend, b/c they're the ones that started using it in the first place.

This is my completely subjective opinion based on my limited personal experience extrapolated out into broad generalization. So, take it with a grain of salt.

Answered by blahblahblacksheep on August 13, 2021

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