At 10:24 AM -0400 6/14/10, Tim White wrote:
>  > Hi all!
>>  I'm pretty inspired this time:
>>
>>  http://onwebdev.blogspot.com/2010/06/pure-css-fisheye-menu-with-icons.html
>>  Gabriele
>
>Or, we can do it with just one image and a little bit of CSS3 magic:
>http://tjameswhite.com/demos/fisheye/
>
>My demo uses Gabriele's original code, minus all the extra background
>images and heights. Instead, I've added CSS transition and transform
>to replicate the fisheye.
>
>Yes, this requires vendor prefixes. It should work in the latest
>versions of Mozilla, Webkit and Opera browsers. Sorry, no IE, and I
>didn't bother making a fall back for IE, which could be done easy
>enough.
>
>Enjoy,
>Tim
>tjameswhite.com


While it's neat, but it's a misnomer. That's not a fisheye, it's just 
a magnification.

A fisheye is like looking through a fisheye lens.

Here's a fisheye picture for example:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Fisheye_lens_room.jpg

The perspective is distorted (i.e., no straight lines)

Cheers,

tedd


-- 
-------
http://sperling.com  http://ancientstones.com  http://earthstones.com
______________________________________________________________________
css-discuss [[email protected]]
http://www.css-discuss.org/mailman/listinfo/css-d
List wiki/FAQ -- http://css-discuss.incutio.com/
List policies -- http://css-discuss.org/policies.html
Supported by evolt.org -- http://www.evolt.org/help_support_evolt/

Reply via email to