While the use case is fine and valid, the user experience couldn't be worse. Or they are using ten year old laptops for the video? I think the user experience made the vrml fail...
Jani 2010/3/4 tosi <[email protected]> > "... a seamless virtual tour through the palace, running without any > noticeable lag or judder." > I have been there and I have seen it live. This Venice scenario runs > with not more than 4 frames per second like it can be seen in the > youtube video. I dont't know what their meaning of "juddering" is. > > > On 4 Mrz., 00:03, Gustavo Alberto Navarro Bilbao > <[email protected]> wrote: > > In the Sirikata mail list, Henrik Bennetsen sen this interesting demo, > > (copy&past): > > > > As Mozilla and Google push to bring native 3D rendering to the browser, a > > > > > team of German researchers could beat them to the punch with XML3D. > > >http://www.pcpro.co.uk/news/356062/xml3d-the-3d-webs-new-champion > > > > Very interesting > > > > Alberto > > -- > http://groups.google.com/group/realxtend > http://www.realxtend.org > -- http://groups.google.com/group/realxtend http://www.realxtend.org
