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Apple proposes adding a element to HTML that displays 3D content

SolveSpace Hubs by Mozilla Transmit
  1. SOLVESPACE is a parametric 3D CAD program with extrude, revolve, union and difference functions.
    >> But wow you gotta get a lot of JS slapped together to just get something rendering. Or you can just model your item in solvespace (or link an STL file) and export it as HTML. Done. https://solvespace.com/index.pl Examples: http://m-labs.hk/software/solvespace/.

    #3D #Architecture #3D Modeling 20 social mentions

  2. A WebVR experiment from Mozilla Mixed Reality
    Pricing:
    • Open Source

    #Virtual Reality #Virtual Worlds #Games 42 social mentions

  3. Transmit is an FTP client for Mac OS X and Mac OS Classic (which is unsupported).
    Based on the comments so far, I think I'm in the minority who think this would be a good feature for the web. This proposal might not be perfect, but I think the idea is great. There's lots of good reasons to semantically want to embed a 3d model in a page, like any other type of media. Say you're writing a course explaining how differential gears work - a 3d model of that could be really handy to look at to learn. A shoe company wanting to have a model of their sneakers in their shop. Sure we've got canvas, and WebGL, and WebGPU, and libraries like three.js, which work. But wow you gotta get a lot of JS slapped together to just get something rendering. E.g. I wonder how long transit spent getting a truck rendering on this page. https://panic.com/transmit/ The other challenge of doing everything yourself is that code is stuck in time. It's going to get very minimal benefits from browsers and devices getting better over time, it won't get native UI changes - in 5 years it'll look very dated, if it's still accessible. A model element makes a lot of sense to me.

    #FTP Client #File Transfer #SFTP Client 21 social mentions

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