Community Events

Community Events

Term explanation

Definition and meaning

Community events bring together groups of people around a shared interest, cause, or location — such as neighborhood gatherings, club meetups, open-source contributor conferences, or industry user groups. Unlike corporate events, community events are often grassroots, volunteer-driven, and focused on connection rather than commercial objectives. They play an important role in building belonging, sharing knowledge, and sustaining networks of people with common goals or values.

LIZ AI ensures community event presentations are consistent and current across every chapter, region, or team. Brand templates and automatic updates mean no local version ever falls out of step with the organization.

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Other glossary terms

Model Context Protocol (MCP)

The Model Context Protocol (MCP) is an open standard developed by Anthropic in 2024 and widely adopted in 2025 by OpenAI, Google, and Microsoft. It defines a standardized way for AI agents to connect to external tools, data sources, and enterprise systems — without requiring custom integrations for every connection. MCP acts as a universal interface: an AI agent with MCP support can securely access databases, APIs, document repositories, and business applications using a consistent protocol, regardless of the underlying system. This dramatically simplifies how AI is embedded into complex enterprise environments.

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Large Language Model (LLM)

A large language model (LLM) is an AI system trained on vast amounts of text data that can understand, generate, and transform language at a human-like level. LLMs power a wide range of applications — from chatbots and writing assistants to automated document creation and data summarization. In enterprise software, LLMs are increasingly embedded into workflows to interpret unstructured data, draft content, and translate information between systems automatically. In contrast, the Large Presentation Model (LPM) is a specialised AI system that orchestrates the entire presentation cycle in an enterprise context.

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Closed Questions

Closed questions are questions that can be answered with a limited set of responses — most commonly a simple 'yes' or 'no', or a selection from predefined options. They are used to gather specific, factual information quickly and efficiently. In presentations and training settings, closed questions are useful for gauging audience understanding, confirming agreement, or running quick polls. While efficient, they offer little depth and should be balanced with open-ended questions when richer feedback or discussion is needed.

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Living Presentation

A living presentation is a slide deck that continuously updates to reflect the latest data, content, and context — rather than being a static snapshot. Like a living document, it is connected to data sources that feed new information into the slides automatically. Living presentations are a practical implementation of the Agentic Slides concept and are the natural output of data-driven presentation workflows. They are particularly valuable for recurring formats such as management reports and investor updates.

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