On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 3:13 PM, Stuart Prescott <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
> Hi All,
>
> As a brief respite from packaging discussions, here's a user question:
>
> What software would you use or recommend for preparing a poster for
> presentation at a conference? [0]
>
> A few things come to mind straight off -- perhaps existing users can make
> comments on these things:
>
> * openoffice impress or draw: I guess these would be the same as doing a
> poster in powerpoint, with the same limitations. Does it work OK?


I've had labmates go the PowerPoint way. I think the biggest issue has been
pixelated graphics. If you can get good resolution graphics then it's not
too bad.


> * inkscape: can it handle flowing and editing text nicely? I've only ever
> used
> it for drawing. I see it's debtagged as "works-with-format::tex" which I
> find
> intriguing but don't know what that means in practice. I know it has
> bugs/limitations in being able to compress jpeg images which could result
> in
> an obscenely large PDF export when it comes to producing the final product.


I use inkscape to great figures for posters and papers, but I've not tried
to do the whole poster that way. I think it would be a bit limited in terms
of layout.

* scribus: I've never used it but by its description it sounds like a good
> tool for the job; I've heard it's a bit quirky but that it's a good program
> for this sort of thing.
>

This is what I used for my last poster. It gives some pretty good results.
Layout is pretty easy and it will definitely get the job done. It is quirky
though and it took me a bit to figure out how to do things.


>
> * latex (directly): as for lyx, it would of course be possible, but is it
> sensible to do so? [1]


I've also done posters in the past using plain-old latex. It took me
*forever* to do it though. The results were great of course (equations look
great) but for me personally not worth the time.

-Jordan

Reply via email to