~terry
Thu, Jul 25, 1996 (18:09)
seed
FIGleaf Inline Plug-in for Netscape 2.0 -- FIGleaf Inline is a plug-in
for Windows 95/NT users that allows a variety of image formats to
be viewed from within the Netscape 2.0 web browser. Images can
either be embedded within an HTML page or viewed separately as
a full-page graphic. FIGleaf supports a multitude of filetypes, many
of which have never had the possibility of being viewed by a web
browser without the help of an external helper application.
Computer Graphics Metafile (CGM), Tagged Image File Format
(TIFF), Encapsulated PostScript (EPSI/EPSF), CCITT Group 4
Type I (G4), CCITT Group 4 Type II (TG4), Microsoft Windows
Bitmap (BMP), Microsoft Windows Metafile (WMF), Portable
Pixmap (PPM), Portable Greymap (PGM), Portable Bitmap
(PBM), Sun Raster files (SUN), Portable Network Graphics
(PNG), Silicon Graphics RGB (RGB), Graphics Interchange
Format (GIF), and Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG)
formats are all handled with ease by FIGleaf; however, most all of
these images are either dithered or displayed at low resolution,
resulting in poor image quality.
The exception to this rule is the CGM format, developed by the
makers of FIGleaf, Carberry Technology, which is a vector-based
graphic format as opposed to the more common raster-based
graphic types (GIF, JPEG, TIFF, etc.). Vector graphics allow
image scaling without true loss in the image's integrity. By storing
graphical information as mathematical entities such as ellipses,
rectangles, lines, and polylines, a user can view a vector graphic in
any size and not lose the overall quality of the image.
You can zoom into an image and not be subject to the image
fuzzies or zoom out of an image and not be subject to the image
jaggies that frequently occur with modification of the size of a
raster-based image. Like the Corel CMX vector format, users will
benefit from CGM's superior printing capabilities and compression
methods (resulting in smaller file sizes). However, as with the CMX
Viewer, FIGleaf offers no tools for users to create their own CGM
images. Overall, while the FIGleaf viewer does give users
capabilities never before available on the web, at this stage, users
will likely be left with the impression that the results are not quite as
spectacular as hoped for.
Pros: Vector-based images on the web, allows users to view many
other graphic formats as well
Cons: As with all plug-in modules, CGM images are limited to the
browsers that support the module
New: Now supports PNG and RGB images, streaming support for
images, back/forward commands, more
Version Reviewed: 1.0 Official Release
Date of Review: 4/3/96 Reviewer: Forrest Stroud
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