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