On Wed, 12 Jul 2006 14:52:24 +0200, Hans Hagen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Johan Sandblom wrote:
>> Looks amazing. Looking at the license it appears in fact to be free as
>>
> i suppose that it more or less has to be free anyway because gs and
> python are used
Don't know for gs, but you there's
Nice one, Thomas.
A few comments for the Mac folks:
Thomas A. Schmitz wrote:
> screen with your mouse pointer. There are some disadvantages: it has
> a lot of pythonish dependencies (on OS X, I could install them via
> darwinports, but it's a lot more difficult on most linux distros), it
I
Thomas A. Schmitz wrote:
> screen with your mouse pointer. There are some disadvantages: it has
> a lot of pythonish dependencies (on OS X, I could install them via
> darwinports, but it's a lot more difficult on most linux distros), it
> needs opengl support, and a reasonably fast machine. B
Johan Sandblom wrote:
> Looks amazing. Looking at the license it appears in fact to be free as
>
i suppose that it more or less has to be free anyway because gs and
python are used
Hans
-
Very nice but since GS doesn't seem to be happy with javascript... I
can't use it for my ConTeXt-made slides (with javascript steps and
animations)
Anyway, it's nice to know it exists...
Thomas A. Schmitz a écrit :
>As the subject line says, this is slightly OT, but it may be of
>interest to so
Looks amazing. Looking at the license it appears in fact to be free as
in speech (distributed under GPL 2 or later), which of course only
makes it more attractive!
Johan
2006/7/12, Thomas A. Schmitz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> As the subject line says, this is slightly OT, but it may be of
> interest
As the subject line says, this is slightly OT, but it may be of
interest to some. If you produce your presentations in ConTeXt and
want to show the resulting pdf, you have to use a pdf-viewer. I just
hate Adobe Reader with its bloat and its intrusiveness; other
solutions (such as evince and