General ⇒ LaTeX vs. HTML5
LaTeX vs. HTML5
So HTML5 is pretty hot. Apple has released a demo page on the different advancements for media support etc ( http://www.apple.com/html5/ ) and it looks great. This is exactly what I've been looking for in a way. PDF's are a pretty good method of sharing information ... but only text and static pictures so far.
That being said does anyone know of any projects that would allow me to either embed some (opensource friendly) media using LaTeX? OR how about a XeTeX to HTML5 converter? Optimally I would like to have a 'rigid document' as the output and not something that is subject to the rendering idiosyncrasies of different web browsers.
My inspiration for future documents is the Alice eBook that was just released for the iPad ( http://www.digitalbuzzblog.com/alice-eb ... y-amazing/ ) but that's an html5 only endeavor at the moment.
-J
NEW: TikZ book now 40% off at Amazon.com for a short time.
And: Currently, Packt sells ebooks for $4.99 each if you buy 5 of their over 1000 ebooks. If you choose only a single one, $9.99. How about combining 3 LaTeX books with Python, gnuplot, mathplotlib, Matlab, ChatGPT or other AI books? Epub and PDF. Bundle (3 books, add more for higher discount): https://packt.link/MDH5p
LaTeX vs. HTML5
It's been possible to embed multimedia objects in LaTeX-generated documents for quite some time. Take a look for example, at the movie15 package.
No doubt HTML5 audio/video tags will be supported in tex4ht/htlatex conversions at some point.
And while I don't really think it's relevant here, may I add that Apple's own support of HTML5 in Safari is very poor and badly done, in my opinion, and that it may take awhile before the web is really ready for HTML5.
Re: LaTeX vs. HTML5
