Now that T. Jake Luciani has created a working RSvgDevice package (with one function called devSVG), we can produce SVG output from ordinary plots, not necessarily just those made with grid. Since Firefox and Mozilla support SVG (in recent versions), this might be a good way to put figures in web pages in a way that can be easily scaled, and even (with tweaking) manipulated with scripts. (Note that gridSVG can also help here, although I haven't tried it.) I have now (finally) figured out how to get SVG into a slide show. I use Firefox for talks (and lectures). I remove the sidebar and all toolbars, and move the location window into the one remaining bar, the one with "File" etc. (I like this anyway.) Then I use F11 to toggle fullscreen. The usual keys go from slide to slide (PgUp, PgDn). There is an associated css file that is required for this to work. An example, with only one SVG image in it (in slide #12), is in the notes for a couple of lectures I plan to start this week: http://www.psych.upenn.edu/~baron/900/prob.xml Unfortunately, this one does not take advantage of the possibility of using units other than px, because I know it works on the classroom projector. It was also not made with R. Oh well. It does show how to embed the image. The main trick here is to use xml, which requires very strict coding: no upper case tags; all tags closed; etc. (See the example for how to do this.) Firefox turns out to be great at reporting xml errors, so this was not very frustrating to do. Jon -- Jonathan Baron, Professor of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania Home page: http://www.sas.upenn.edu/~baron