Keynote for iPad: Best practices for creating a presentation on a Mac for use on an iPad
When you create a Keynote presentation on your Mac that you intend to share to an iPad, your presentations will look their best if you follow the recommendations below.
Hi all,
I'm considering to purchase an IPad for remote administration on server, headless, in office. It will be used for Internet browsing and receiving emails while outdoor. Notebook is too heavy. What would be your suggestion? Mac or Android system? TIA
B.R.
satimis (0 Replies)
What to say nothing is no more secure
Apple's new iPad has been taken down by malware within a few weeks of it being in the shops. It is an article of faith amongst Apple fanboys that Jobs' Mob gear is super secure and malware only exists on Windows machines.
Despite the fact that Apple gear... (1 Reply)
pyntor(1) Pyntor pyntor(1)NAME
pyntor - modular slides viewer and presentation tool
SYNOPSIS
pyntor [OPTIONS] presentation-file|presentation-archive
DESCRIPTION
Pyntor is a presentation tool which can display slides and effects of various formats thanks to its collection of components which are
loaded as specified in the presentation-file, commonly called script. Components can either affect the rendering or the input handling, or
both. They are documented in detail in components.txt in the pyntor documentation directory, while this manual page tries to only briefly
document the user interface to the program on the command line and some keyboard shortcuts to be used while the pyntor is running.
Since presentations are normally distributed as presentation-archive files, usually named *.pyntor, those too are accepted as parameters to
pyntor. To learn about the creation of presentations and archives, see below for some references.
OPTIONS -c, --components
Creates and outputs a formatted list of slides, tracking the components in use like in a real presentation. Additionally, all compo-
nents are checked for presence and usability. This option is mainly useful for debugging, but also to get a quick overview of a pre-
sentation.
-d, --direct=scriptline
IF a presentation only uses a single component, no script needs to be created. Instead, the component invocation line which would
normally be written into the script can be passed directly on the command line.
-x, --export=file.pdf|htmldir
Exports a presentation to a (fixed-size) PDF file, if the option argument suffix is .pdf, or otherwise to a directory of PNG images
and a simple HTML file with thumbnail preview images.
-w, --windowed
When running the presentation, do not switch to fullscreen, but run in a window instead. This option is also mainly useful for
debugging.
-v, --version
Displays the version number of Pyntor.
-h, --help
Displays a summary of all available command line options. This option works without providing a script.
-u, --usage
Displays common usage scenarios so that the desired effect can be achieved quickly. The examples are for running a presentation and
debugging one, respectively. This option works without providing a script.
SHORTCUTS
The following keyboard shortcuts are supported globally throughout Pyntor. Note that individual components can make use of additional
shortcuts, please consult the component documentation about this.
F Toggle between fullscreen mode and windowed mode for displaying slides.
P Pyntor menu to allow jumping to arbitrary slides of the presentation.
S Pyntor menu to allow type-as-you-find fulltext search, followed by slide jumping as with P. This is useful for the situation of
having people reminded of some slide without knowing the page number after a talk.
T Gadget displaying the clock time and already spent presentation time in the lower right corner of the screen. Consecutive presses of
the T key will increase the brightness of the gadget, but usually the indicator is for the presenter and not for the audience.
AUTHORS
Josef Spillner <josef@coolprojects.org>
SEE ALSO pyntor-components(1), pyntor-selfrun(1)Cool Projects 0.6 pyntor(1)