~terry
Thu, Jul 25, 1996 (13:15)
seed
WebSpace -- The beta for WebSpace has finally arrived for
Windows 95 and Windows NT. This is a very cool client and will
likely become extremely popular as the Virtual Reality Modeling
Language (VRML) evolves; however, the current release is quite
buggy and limited by the small number of VRML worlds currently
available. What was previously only available for high-end Silicon
Graphics, Inc. (SGI) machines is now accessible on everyone's
desktop computer (if you're using Windows 95 or NT that is) and is
quite easy to use. WebSpace isn't going to take the 'net by storm
overnight, but it very well could become the next killer app and is
definitely worthy of considerable attention.
WebSpace is part of The Open Inventor package which not only
allows users to browse VRML worlds but also offers apps for
creating and maintaining your own worlds. Several clients are
included in this package -- SceneViewer for direct manipulation of
scene objects and worlds; Inventor Wizard for modifying Microsoft
AppWizard source code in order to create a skeleton Open
Inventor app; SceneViewer OCX for providing an OLE control
wrapper for the Open Inventor SceneViewer app; and two limited
games, SlotCar and Maze, for demonstrating the possibilities of
virtual worlds. The WebSpace browser also comes with several
built-in VRML worlds for exploring; in addition, WebSpace works
with Netscape and other web browsers as an external application
for *.wrl VRML worlds.
The VRML worlds are indeed quite limited in nature right now, but
they do provide some amount of insight into what can be expected
and anticipated as the language evolves. I recommend checking out
The House of Immersion (also available as the local file
urlhouse.wrl) with WebSpace for an idea of the possibilities with
VRML and for a preview of how HTML and VRML will likely
merge. Regardless of the current status of the language, the
possibilities are indeed quite limitless for WebSpace and VRML.
Pros: VRML browsing for Windows 95 and NT, Open Inventor for
VRML software development
Cons: Still quite buggy, few VRML worlds currently available
New: Complete VRML 1.0 support, HTML browser integration,
GZip support
Version Reviewed: 1.0 Beta 2
Date of Review: 9/15/95 Reviewer: Forrest Stroud
apps conference
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