Re: [O] state of the art for html5 presentations?

2012-09-19 Thread Bastien
John Hendy jw.he...@gmail.com writes:

 You'll need to clone impress.js repo and copy over the js and css
 directories, to the directory of your html file.  The README gives
 instructions for the same [
 https://github.com/kinjo/org-impress-js.el#quick-start ]

Great!  I added this to Worg.

-- 
 Bastien



Re: [O] state of the art for html5 presentations?

2012-09-19 Thread Rainer M Krug
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Hash: SHA1

On 18/09/12 18:52, John Hendy wrote:
 On Tue, Sep 18, 2012 at 10:20 AM, Puneeth Chaganti puncha...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 On Tue, Sep 18, 2012 at 8:24 PM, John Hendy jw.he...@gmail.com wrote: [..]
 
 Has anyone used this? I just cloned it and created the example 
 presentation. For Chromium,
 Google-Chrome, and Firefox on Linux, I get messages that my browser is not 
 supported. Is
 there some specific plugin I'm supposed to have for this to work? What is 
 it, exactly, that
 it's finding missing?
 
 You'll need to clone impress.js repo and copy over the js and css 
 directories, to the
 directory of your html file.  The README gives instructions for the same [ 
 https://github.com/kinjo/org-impress-js.el#quick-start ]
 
 Got ahead of myself and missed that. This. Is. Awesome.

Sounds impressive!

Could you please provide a small example of an org file and how the exported 
html5 presentation
looks?

Thanks,

Rainer

 
 

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Re: [O] state of the art for html5 presentations?

2012-09-19 Thread John Hendy
On the note of presentations... one thing to spice things up I've used
is impress!ve:
- http://impressive.sourceforge.net/

It's pretty cool! Fades, presenter-only displayed timer, zoom, mouse
spotlight, drag to create highlight boxes, a OSX-like zoom out on all
slides to select one you want. Anyway, not really related to html5,
but for those wanting things like impress.js just because pdf
presentations can be boring, impress!ve might be a middle ground?

John



Re: [O] state of the art for html5 presentations?

2012-09-19 Thread Rainer M Krug
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Hash: SHA1

On 19/09/12 16:19, John Hendy wrote:
 On the note of presentations... one thing to spice things up I've used is 
 impress!ve: -
 http://impressive.sourceforge.net/
 
 It's pretty cool! Fades, presenter-only displayed timer, zoom, mouse 
 spotlight, drag to create
 highlight boxes, a OSX-like zoom out on all slides to select one you want. 
 Anyway, not really
 related to html5, but for those wanting things like impress.js just because 
 pdf presentations
 can be boring, impress!ve might be a middle ground?

Impressive is really nice - but often at conferences one can not use the own 
computer for the
presentations and a standard format has to be used. pdf to the rescue. But as I 
understand it, an
html5 presentation can be shown from a normal browser - so this should, as pdf, 
work nearly
everywhere.

Otherwise, Impressive is very impressive.

Rainer

 
 John
 
 

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Re: [O] state of the art for html5 presentations?

2012-09-18 Thread Bastien
Hi Matt,

Matt Price mopto...@gmail.com writes:

 I keep returning to this every few months, hoping things have gotten a
 little easier -- what tools are people using right now to make html5
 presentations out of their org files?

The thing is that there are many HTML5 presentation systems.

I think the most widely used is org-s5 by Eric:
  https://github.com/eschulte/org-S5

but I guess you know this one already.

-- 
 Bastien



Re: [O] state of the art for html5 presentations?

2012-09-18 Thread Fabrice Popineau
[[http://imakewebthings.com/deck.js/][Deck.js HTML Slides ]]
[[http://webf1.soc.port.ac.uk/2011/style/lecture/#s%3D1][[WebF1: Web
Foundations 1]]
[[http://fooo.fr/~vjeux/github/dassault_presentation/#slide-0][JavascriptRocks]]
[[http://bartaz.github.com/impress.js/#/bored/][Creating stunning
visualizations with impress.js]]
[[http://dontkry.com/jmpress.js/#/home][jmpress.js]]

There is this :
https://github.com/kinjo/org-impress-js.el
that could be useful to impress/jmpress .

Best regards,

Fabrice



2012/9/18 Bastien b...@altern.org

 Hi Matt,

 Matt Price mopto...@gmail.com writes:

  I keep returning to this every few months, hoping things have gotten a
  little easier -- what tools are people using right now to make html5
  presentations out of their org files?

 The thing is that there are many HTML5 presentation systems.

 I think the most widely used is org-s5 by Eric:
   https://github.com/eschulte/org-S5

 but I guess you know this one already.

 --
  Bastien




-- 
Fabrice Popineau
-
SUPELEC
Département Informatique
3, rue Joliot Curie
91192 Gif/Yvette Cedex
Tel direct : +33 (0) 169851950
Standard : +33 (0) 169851212
--


Re: [O] state of the art for html5 presentations?

2012-09-18 Thread John Hendy
On Tue, Sep 18, 2012 at 6:48 AM, Fabrice Popineau
fabrice.popin...@supelec.fr wrote:
 [[http://imakewebthings.com/deck.js/][Deck.js HTML Slides ]]
 [[http://webf1.soc.port.ac.uk/2011/style/lecture/#s%3D1][[WebF1: Web
 Foundations 1]]
 [[http://fooo.fr/~vjeux/github/dassault_presentation/#slide-0][Javascript
 Rocks]]
 [[http://bartaz.github.com/impress.js/#/bored/][Creating stunning
 visualizations with impress.js]]
 [[http://dontkry.com/jmpress.js/#/home][jmpress.js]]

 There is this :
 https://github.com/kinjo/org-impress-js.el
 that could be useful to impress/jmpress .

Has anyone used this? I just cloned it and created the example
presentation. For Chromium, Google-Chrome, and Firefox on Linux, I get
messages that my browser is not supported. Is there some specific
plugin I'm supposed to have for this to work? What is it, exactly,
that it's finding missing?


John


 Best regards,

 Fabrice



 2012/9/18 Bastien b...@altern.org

 Hi Matt,

 Matt Price mopto...@gmail.com writes:

  I keep returning to this every few months, hoping things have gotten a
  little easier -- what tools are people using right now to make html5
  presentations out of their org files?

 The thing is that there are many HTML5 presentation systems.

 I think the most widely used is org-s5 by Eric:
   https://github.com/eschulte/org-S5

 but I guess you know this one already.

 --
  Bastien




 --
 Fabrice Popineau
 -
 SUPELEC
 Département Informatique
 3, rue Joliot Curie
 91192 Gif/Yvette Cedex
 Tel direct : +33 (0) 169851950
 Standard : +33 (0) 169851212
 --





Re: [O] state of the art for html5 presentations?

2012-09-18 Thread Puneeth Chaganti
On Tue, Sep 18, 2012 at 8:24 PM, John Hendy jw.he...@gmail.com wrote:
[..]

 Has anyone used this? I just cloned it and created the example
 presentation. For Chromium, Google-Chrome, and Firefox on Linux, I get
 messages that my browser is not supported. Is there some specific
 plugin I'm supposed to have for this to work? What is it, exactly,
 that it's finding missing?

You'll need to clone impress.js repo and copy over the js and css
directories, to the directory of your html file.  The README gives
instructions for the same [
https://github.com/kinjo/org-impress-js.el#quick-start ]



Re: [O] state of the art for html5 presentations?

2012-09-18 Thread John Hendy
On Tue, Sep 18, 2012 at 10:20 AM, Puneeth Chaganti puncha...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Tue, Sep 18, 2012 at 8:24 PM, John Hendy jw.he...@gmail.com wrote:
 [..]

 Has anyone used this? I just cloned it and created the example
 presentation. For Chromium, Google-Chrome, and Firefox on Linux, I get
 messages that my browser is not supported. Is there some specific
 plugin I'm supposed to have for this to work? What is it, exactly,
 that it's finding missing?

 You'll need to clone impress.js repo and copy over the js and css
 directories, to the directory of your html file.  The README gives
 instructions for the same [
 https://github.com/kinjo/org-impress-js.el#quick-start ]

Got ahead of myself and missed that. This. Is. Awesome.



Re: [O] state of the art for html5 presentations?

2012-09-18 Thread Fabrice Popineau
Speaking for myself, I'm tired of how cumbersome it is to compile
latex+beamer+tikz.
Huge compilation time.
I'm craving for something that will avoid this compilation step.
Currently, the only thing that prevents me to switch my slides to
pure HTML(5) is the lack of some tool to program my drawings
(some kind of translator from lisp to svg or raphael).

Fabrice


2012/9/18 John Hendy jw.he...@gmail.com

 On Tue, Sep 18, 2012 at 10:20 AM, Puneeth Chaganti puncha...@gmail.com
 wrote:
  On Tue, Sep 18, 2012 at 8:24 PM, John Hendy jw.he...@gmail.com wrote:
  [..]
 
  Has anyone used this? I just cloned it and created the example
  presentation. For Chromium, Google-Chrome, and Firefox on Linux, I get
  messages that my browser is not supported. Is there some specific
  plugin I'm supposed to have for this to work? What is it, exactly,
  that it's finding missing?
 
  You'll need to clone impress.js repo and copy over the js and css
  directories, to the directory of your html file.  The README gives
  instructions for the same [
  https://github.com/kinjo/org-impress-js.el#quick-start ]

 Got ahead of myself and missed that. This. Is. Awesome.




-- 
Fabrice Popineau
-
SUPELEC
Département Informatique
3, rue Joliot Curie
91192 Gif/Yvette Cedex
Tel direct : +33 (0) 169851950
Standard : +33 (0) 169851212
--


Re: [O] state of the art for html5 presentations?

2012-09-18 Thread Matt Price
On Tue, Sep 18, 2012 at 12:52 PM, John Hendy jw.he...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Tue, Sep 18, 2012 at 10:20 AM, Puneeth Chaganti puncha...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 On Tue, Sep 18, 2012 at 8:24 PM, John Hendy jw.he...@gmail.com wrote:
 [..]

 Has anyone used this? I just cloned it and created the example
 presentation. For Chromium, Google-Chrome, and Firefox on Linux, I get
 messages that my browser is not supported. Is there some specific
 plugin I'm supposed to have for this to work? What is it, exactly,
 that it's finding missing?

 You'll need to clone impress.js repo and copy over the js and css
 directories, to the directory of your html file.  The README gives
 instructions for the same [
 https://github.com/kinjo/org-impress-js.el#quick-start ]

 Got ahead of myself and missed that. This. Is. Awesome.


I agree that impress.js is pretty cool! I have been using kinjo's
org-export-as-html5presentation and finding that it works really well
(http://hpda.hackinghistory.ca/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/03-public-sphere.html#slide1).
 something I like a lot about it is that the css is embedded in the
presentation -- this makes it easy to post to a website  have it work
automatically.  I can't tell immediately if it's possible to set the
CSS stylesheet  impress.js location with a custom variable or not.
If it is possible -- it would b pretty fantastic.  It looks like it
ought to be possible to integrate into wordpress, too -- so I could in
principle w/ some modifications to org2blog/wp, just post
presentations to my class blog -- god that would be fantastic!  Maybe
next year though.

Whew, it's pretty exciting really.

Thanks for the links, and if anyone is using it in those ways I'd love
to hear about it!

Matt



Re: [O] state of the art for html5 presentations?

2012-09-18 Thread Nick Dokos
Fabrice Popineau fabrice.popin...@supelec.fr wrote:

 Speaking for myself, I'm tired of how cumbersome it is to compile 
 latex+beamer+tikz.
 Huge compilation time.

I can compile a 20-slide file (no tikz) in less than a second.
Of course, larger slide decks will take longer and I'm sure tikz
requires considerable CPU time, but what do you mean by huge?
Also how big a slide deck are you talking about and what percentage
of the slides use tikz?

Nick

PS. It's all idle curiosity on my part.




Re: [O] state of the art for html5 presentations?

2012-09-18 Thread Fabrice Popineau

 I can compile a 20-slide file (no tikz) in less than a second.
 Of course, larger slide decks will take longer and I'm sure tikz
 requires considerable CPU time, but what do you mean by huge?
 Also how big a slide deck are you talking about and what percentage
 of the slides use tikz?


About 1500 slides (350 actual frames with overlays) for a 20 hours course.
LuaTeX + opentype fonts makes it even slower. Some complex slides with
animate algorithms (mergesort, ford fulkerson, stuff like that)
Ok, I can split it in lectures (albeit that's not so simple to use
\lectureonly without
breaking toc). I can use the externalize library. Etc.

Anyway, what's bother me on the long run is that it is only slides. The
browser is able
to render / typeset the text and graphics by itself. No need to resort to
such complex
compilation (there is MathJax, and stuff like Raphael.js and jQuery that
could do the job).
The more powerful your tool is (luatex, opentype fonts etc) the more you
lose
time with details.

Fabrice


  Nick

 PS. It's all idle curiosity on my part.




-- 
Fabrice Popineau
-
SUPELEC
Département Informatique
3, rue Joliot Curie
91192 Gif/Yvette Cedex
Tel direct : +33 (0) 169851950
Standard : +33 (0) 169851212
--


Re: [O] state of the art for html5 presentations?

2012-09-18 Thread Nick Dokos
Fabrice Popineau fabrice.popin...@supelec.fr wrote:

 I can compile a 20-slide file (no tikz) in less than a second.
 Of course, larger slide decks will take longer and I'm sure tikz
 requires considerable CPU time, but what do you mean by huge?
 Also how big a slide deck are you talking about and what percentage
 of the slides use tikz?
 
 About 1500 slides (350 actual frames with overlays) for a 20 hours course.
 LuaTeX + opentype fonts makes it even slower. Some complex slides with 
 animate algorithms (mergesort, ford fulkerson, stuff like that)
 Ok, I can split it in lectures (albeit that's not so simple to use 
 \lectureonly without
 breaking toc). I can use the externalize library. Etc.
 

Yikes! That's a whole 'nother ballgame. Even if I had something that
big, I don't think I could manage it in a single file.

Nick




Re: [O] state of the art for html5 presentations?

2012-09-18 Thread Marcelo de Moraes Serpa
Wow, that's a lot of options! I really liked impress.js, and I'm glad to
know there's an org mode bridge to it :)

I've only used showoff in the past (https://github.com/schacon/showoff) and
it uses one or more markdown files as the source for the presentation. No
need to write HTML/CSS/JS if you don't want to. It's simple and works very
well.

Since it's markdown, I'm sure using org could be very possible, since org
can export to markdown. Perhaps there's even a library out there that
already adapts showoff to org?

On Tue, Sep 18, 2012 at 4:15 PM, Nick Dokos nicholas.do...@hp.com wrote:

 Fabrice Popineau fabrice.popin...@supelec.fr wrote:

  I can compile a 20-slide file (no tikz) in less than a second.
  Of course, larger slide decks will take longer and I'm sure tikz
  requires considerable CPU time, but what do you mean by huge?
  Also how big a slide deck are you talking about and what percentage
  of the slides use tikz?
 
  About 1500 slides (350 actual frames with overlays) for a 20 hours
 course.
  LuaTeX + opentype fonts makes it even slower. Some complex slides with
  animate algorithms (mergesort, ford fulkerson, stuff like that)
  Ok, I can split it in lectures (albeit that's not so simple to use
 \lectureonly without
  breaking toc). I can use the externalize library. Etc.
 

 Yikes! That's a whole 'nother ballgame. Even if I had something that
 big, I don't think I could manage it in a single file.

 Nick





[O] state of the art for html5 presentations?

2012-09-10 Thread Matt Price
I keep returning to this every few months, hoping things have gotten a
little easier -- what tools are people using right now to make html5
presentations out of their org files?

thanks for your help!

Matt