On Sat, 11 Oct 2003, Orna Agmon wrote:
I updated http://www.haifux.org/givelecture.html according to the summary
of the thread so far.
I also found a nice presentation on the subject, and linked to it:
http://www.biostat.harvard.edu/~ebrown/latexpre.pdf
If anybody has anything to add, the
The new-comers site is not valid as well:
http://validator.w3.org/check?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.haifux.org%2Fnewcomers%2F
makes lots of errors. Go ahead and fix them.
On Sat, 11 Oct 2003, Alon Altman wrote:
On Sat, 11 Oct 2003, Orna Agmon wrote:
I updated
I have updated http://www.haifux.org/givelecture.html to
include a list of tools which create free-format presentations.
An alternative to the LaTeX - dvips - ps2pdf route is using
PDFLaTeX, which creates PDF files directly from LaTeX sources.
An advantage of PDFLaTeX is that it allows
On Tue, 7 Oct 2003, Ron Artstein wrote:
I have updated http://www.haifux.org/givelecture.html to
include a list of tools which create free-format presentations.
An alternative to the LaTeX - dvips - ps2pdf route is using
PDFLaTeX, which creates PDF files directly from LaTeX sources.
On Tue, Oct 07, 2003 at 12:15:14PM +0200, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
Prosper is the most common latex-based lecture format. It can be used to
produce fancy slides (e.g. mulix's later slides, IIRC).
Nah, my slides are pretty simple, albeit pretty. Oleg Goldshmidt does
neater things with prosper, and
On Sun, 5 Oct 2003, Orna Agmon wrote:
Hello people,
I have updated http://www.haifux.org/givelecture.html to include a list of
tools which create free-format presentations. Where I knew, I included a
link to a lecture with both outcome and source, to set an example.
I guess not all the