From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 References: <3A63952F-28FE-42F1-B175-878B4FD45739@lsub.org> <574BAE0B-71B2-4C65-B0D9-9D7C89BA5664@9srv.net> In-Reply-To: <574BAE0B-71B2-4C65-B0D9-9D7C89BA5664@9srv.net> Mime-Version: 1.0 (1.0) Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Message-Id: <525C5686-15FC-4121-BF34-84CFB9C6D654@lsub.org> Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit From: Francisco J Ballesteros Date: Sat, 7 Sep 2013 18:40:03 +0200 To: Fans of the OS Plan 9 from Bell Labs <9fans@9fans.net> Subject: Re: [9fans] html5 canvas, go, devdraw Topicbox-Message-UUID: 7ce30b18-ead8-11e9-9d60-3106f5b1d025 I will, thanks to all of you for your replies. Yes, I think that provided what canvas can do, doing something like an omero viewer should be both fast to write and efficient when running. Now that I see that drawterms are around the corner, perhaps here already, I will play with more omero like interfaces. On Sep 7, 2013, at 6:24 PM, Anthony Sorace wrote: > You may be interested in what David Hoskin is doing for one of our > GSoC projects: > https://bitbucket.org/dhoskin/9webdraw > He's been producing weekly status updates, which you can follow > along with over on the plan9-gsoc google group: > http://groups.google.com/group/plan9-gsoc > It's not done, but he's gotten promising results and is still working on > it. Check it out. > > It'd be interesting to see how simply something for Omero could be > done, bypassing draw entirely. I really like the model you came up > with there, and wish there was more diversity in implementations. > > Anthony >