Standards-Based CSS/XHTML Slide Show
sootman writes "Eric Meyer, the man behind the famous Complex Spiral (CSS) Demo page, is at it again. He has created S5, "a slide show format based entirely on XHTML, CSS, and JavaScript." As he says, "With one file, you can run a complete slide show and have a printer-friendly version as well. The markup used for the slides is very simple, highly semantic, and completely accessible." So it can be used for PowerPoint-like work and the show responds to a variety of input--you can go to the next slide by pressing Return, Right, Space, etc. It is being released under a Creative Commons license. So fire up our favorite standards-compliant browser and check it out!"
Wow... the irony. Slashdot is talking about standards. Isn't it about time that /. itself should be standards compliant?
BTW, to make this comment on topic, the slideshow looks pretty decent, but I wouldn't consider this ground breaking stuff. Eric Krock (netscape technology evangelist) was doing these sort of presentations in the 1998/1999 timeframe.
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This is an excellent example of the Web applications that Microsoft feared. Even though it is crude, and it has one killer limitation:
.. the html version looks far prettier on the web than powerpoint does.
* Fonts are not scaled based on display resolution and available pixels; manual CSS editing is required
And a massively annoying one:
* Only one author can be listed in the metadata
I'm not quite sure why the second limitation exists. But already this program does all of the important functions I need Powerpoint for, and it has one big advantage over powerpoint
I was highly intrigued to learn about Opera's powerpoint alternative and previous attempts in this direction. This may be the first web app that I use all the time.
Also makes me wish Microsoft supported more of the CSS standard on IE. I've been using CSS since '99 and almost every interesting effect breaks in IE Win. Thankfully more Windows users are using alternative browsers for security reasons.
Now if only Slashdot would validate!
Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
I'd like to see if it's compatible with Dean Edwards' IE7 script. If so, it could almost be considered cross-browser compatible enough for general use.
Guess I'll have to look for a mirror...
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For some websites, they might as well serve up pdfs.
Don't even joke about that - Acrobat is slow, buggy, crash-prone, backwards-combatible. And on Windows (yes, I have to use it sometimes), it always tries to install something called "Microsoft Journal Viewer". PDFs suck ass for web presentation - although they are nice for non-live stuff.
Looks someone tried to create a standards compliant theme, in 2002. I haven't really investigated much to see where they finally got to, but looking at one of the comments make me wonder what the oldest browser /. should work in?
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I needed to create some slides last week for a presentation to my company's Best Practice group. After working out the actual content I wanted, it took me all of 20 minutes to create the content using s5.
Here's the final result: Introduction to CruiseControl
Mozilla users can switch to alternative stylesheets using the switcher on the status bar.
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