Jim Pflugrath wrote:
One should be able to see 3D from the depth-cueing and by keeping the view in motion.
Don't ever use stereo glasses in a public seminar.
"putting the molecule in motion" is a good way to let the audience see 3D. I like to make a small animated gif ("rocking gif") which rotates back and forth through 3 or 5 pictures covering 5-10 degrees of rotaton about Y. It seems recent versions of powerpoint have dropped support for animated gif, so if I ever have to upgrade PP beyond office97 or 2000, I will have to use movies, which I suspect will be significantly larger. I heard somewhere that the reason chickens (which have eyes on the opposite sides of their heads, giving binocular vision a different meaning) bob their heads up and down is to get a 3D perspective. Definitely Jan Löwe's "type B" beings. eab