Simple web based presentation system useful for WineConf
Hi, With the spring comes WineConf 2005, and perhaps some interesting presentations by people. Last time I went to WineConf I was asked to write a mini presentation to show newbies what Wine hacking was all about. In the end, there weren't many non-Wine developers there (which is what you'd expect, really) so we just had a discussion about how to reduce the learning curve instead. In retrospect that was far more interesting and useful than any presentation I could have done. Nonetheless, that presentation was there and when I wrote it, I also wrote a little XSL transform for slide shows. That's because I don't like PowerPoint that much, especially I don't like how sucky its web export is and slideshows are good to put on the web. So here is the presentation itself: http://bylands.dur.ac.uk/~mh/wineconf2004/presentation.xml Just load it into a web browser like Mozilla or even IE6 (konq doesn't support xslt, sorry). As you can see it's nicely Wine themed :) Here is the transform if you want to use the same presentation system yourself: http://navi.cx/~mike/xslt-slides/gen.xsl Just look at the source code of presentation.xml to see how to use it. I'm hoping we'll have a similar mix for this years Wineconf as last year - Lionels OpenGL/games presentation in particular was interesting, but I think the mix of discussion and presentations was good. One problem with presentations is that they tend to be in quite specialist areas, eg a DCOM presentation wouldn't be all that useful because there aren't many people working on it. So I think a bias more towards discussion of process and project organisation, things like that, would be more useful. That's just my humble opinion of course ;) thanks -mike
Mike Hearn wrote:
So here is the presentation itself:
Mike, on page 6 you refer to --debugmsg, that should be changed. Apart from that it looks good to me. Ivan.
On Sun, 23 Jan 2005 15:45:12 +0100, Ivan Leo Puoti wrote:
Mike, on page 6 you refer to --debugmsg, that should be changed. Apart from that it looks good to me.
Sure, back when I wrote it --debugmsg still existed :) I don't think there's any point keeping it up to date, it's just a nice example of what you can do with the transform. thanks -mike
participants (2)
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Ivan Leo Puoti -
Mike Hearn