In my last two postings, I introduced a way to create slide presentations by writing them in a simple text file, with Markdown formatting, and add some of the “infinite canvas” features of Impress.js.
How-To Geek on MSN
Forget Microsoft Word: Here's Why I Do All My Writing in Markdown
Since Markdown files are pure plain text, they’re incredibly lightweight—often just a few kilobytes, even for lengthy ...
How-To Geek on MSN
Here's How I Beautified Markdown Reading in the Terminal
Glow has a narrow but comprehensive feature set that supports reading Markdown in a terminal as a pleasant experience. Even ...
Mac: PowerPoint and Keynote have been the main presentation tools for most people for a long while, but if you're looking for a simpler alternative, Deckset makes things a bit simpler by building ...
There are lots of ways to share results of your R analysis: Word documents, interactive apps, even in the body of an email. But sometimes, you want a slide presentation. It’s easy to generate a ...
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