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
>
>
>

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