Animated Presentations Using SVG 49
Inspired by work on work on non-traditional presentations in KDE's Karbon (part of Calligra), Aditya Bhatt set out to create a purely client-side tool for creating animated presentations in the browser. Based upon svg-edit and using Sozi, the initial results are pretty cool. His weblog post documents the process — the choice of SVG versus html5's canvas, Javascript instead of SMIL, etc. highlighting the challenges faced even today with different browsers offering wildly different levels of support for each web technology. The sourcecode for Awwation can be had over at Github.
Intriguing but... (Score:5, Funny)
...people would forget everything you said, then spend the next month asking how to make PowerPoint do that.
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I was deadly serious, but still ended up with +5 Funny :)
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Powerpoint is boring
http://26.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lqazi8fGKq1r1ks4zo1_500.gif [tumblr.com]
ony two frames out of nineteen? (Score:2)
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Apparently the framework only works well on chrome, FF aurora and opera do crash. But that's pretty much a side effect of being in development. Most devs (or at least the ones that trust in their js skills) write against either chrome or firefox and the integrate on the other browsers.
Nice... (Score:1)
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but how do you share handouts with these tools...
Give them the URL.
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Animated presentations (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Animated presentations (Score:5, Insightful)
Depends on why you are using the animation. Every element of a presentation should have a reason to be there otherwise it is a distraction. Those stupid cube rotation things that Keynote does is annoying and distracting in most presentations because it has me thinking about rotations and not about whatever chemical composition or algorithm or whatever is being discussed. So are the silly wipes people use in PowerPoint.
This type animation is probably going to be used in a stupid and distracting way in most presentations. However I think it can be considerably more useful than the cube or wipes because this kind of animation can be used to place related concepts in spatial relation to one another. Imagine a presentation on a multi-stage algorithm where one moves up and down a flowchart constantly reminded of the relations between different operations in the algorithm due to their spatial relations on the slide. I suspect if this is used that way, it could be a powerful tool.
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I've used Free Mind for presentations. It allows you to open and close branches and gives the big picture. Check out Mind Mapping tools.
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Motion Sickness!! (Score:2)
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Quite variable results (Score:2, Interesting)
...depending on your browser, OS and graphics.
On my 8 year old thinkpad, the animations are pretty jerky on both chrome and firefox, but firefox's font is wrong. On a recent dell, the animations are nice and smooth, but the writing is unreadable on chrome, and some words are missing on firefox.
I really like the idea of this, and if you ignore the flashy presentations above, you could see how it might be useful to present an overview of something complex, but requiring discussion of certain parts of it in d
Choppy (Score:1)
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loading the page over and over again? no it's not.
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When I first looked at it, without reading anything I thought it would make a good intro movie into your web site to showcase your product, not a presentation.
It reminds me of the slideshow that every web site uses nowadays, but much better and in my opinion more professional looking.
Memory hog (Score:1)
Fad fad fad (Score:1)
All it needs is some lens-flare.
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I'm with you, it would be great for something structured like a map, flowchart, etc.
I just thought of a cool one, my buddy went on a road trip last summer, and it would be cool to start you off where he left, and as you go from town to town that he went to, you could see pictures of what was there, and what was between the places as you "fly/drive"(rotate and move) to the next location
SVG Logo (Score:4, Funny)
I got a kick out of how the only thing that wasn't a vector was the SVG logo itself. Hah!
Has this guy seen... (Score:2)
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It's actually referenced in the presentation as a possible backend to display the results generated by his editor. The point being that non-technical people don't have to know HTML, just a vector drawing tool.
This is already available in Inkscape! (Score:4, Informative)
Inkscape + jessyink (which is nowadays included by default in inkscape) has been doing this for several years.
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No mod points, but parent comment is Informative (got the hint?)
Strange, there are so few svg animation programs (Score:2)
Strange, there are so few svg animation programs? Ktoon appears unsupported, Synfig has no importer for svg files and an addon for Inkscape still is in the making... Sad.
Synfig has an importer for svg files! (Score:2)
Synfig (http://www.synfig.org/) has an importer for svg files!
It has been around since a few subreleases. Just right-click on the workspace.
Nice to see!
Animated SVG Cave presentation (Score:2)
I have an animated SVG presentation of a cave strucure here [gringer.org].
Already Done (Score:1)
Cool but let's add 3D (Score:2)
It's neat and reminds me of Scott McCloud's comics.
FWIW around 1995 or 1997 I made a 3D interactive presentation on an SGI machine with an early VRML viewer, Cosmo IIRC.
By placing photographs in different orientations in a 3D space, clicking on each would send the user on a spinning arc that ended with the next image in sequence being displayed in proper orientation. Going to the next image would involve backflips, twists, sliding across the stars.
Anyway, I was just thinking that Sozi is cool and makes beau