On Mon, 11 Dec 1995, john marcogliese wrote:
> Our school has never delved into VRML before. I would like to know 
> does a school have VRML on their home. We are thinking of some 3d design 
> where the user would move through the school and click on certain 
> areas to obtain info etc about departments, clubs etc.. Has any 
> school done this? Is there an example of a building where this is 
> done? 
I have a question. Because VRML and HTML are constrained by bandwidth, 
what is the breaking point between when you should and should not 
incorporate vrml into a Web site? This person's question begs the 
quesation, is VRML appropriate for all sites? And if the answer is no, 
what is the reason? I love VRML, even if I can't do it well yet, but I'm 
not sure that as an html author I should incorporate VRML into 
everything, except at an inline image level. It seems to me (an amateur) 
that this school's communications needs would be best served by a tight, 
effective web site. Of course, incorporating vrml into this school's web 
site would make it appear a lot more impressive in the eyes of a 
potential student who's undecided about which school to attend. 
Feedback welcome, flames tolerated. :-)
Chuck