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Ah, another person *does* exist that can't "focus" while cross-eyed.
You'd think this is easy since it's mentioned a lot for doing these sort
of things. I can keep focus no matter what "wall-eyed" (never understood
this term).
I have a simple method, requiring no instruments, for seeing this sort
of image; explained with small illustration at my 3D viewing web page:
http://members.aol.com/wrld0rigin/3D.htm (zero in origin, capital "D")
Markus Becker wrote:
>
> How am I supposed to look at it? Cross-eyed?
> It's too far apart for looking at it wall-eyed and I'm
> not able to focus cross-eyed....
>
> Markus
>
> Lewis wrote:
> >
> > First of all, I'm really Noam Lewis (you probably recognize it by now)
> > but I'm posting under Lewis since my brother changed the name to his
> > when he saw Noam. Any messages under the name Eran Lewis or Basil Lewis
> > were really posted by me. And so from now on I'll go under the name
> > Lewis......(Oh, the joy of having to share a computer with 5 people.....
> > ;))
> >
> > blabla bla.....Anyway:
> >
> > I just got the gilles famous tree macro, and the first thing I did was a
> > stereopovograph.
> > For those interested, the stereo viewer mention, i would suggest
> > calling: stereopovscope for the sake of having a cool long name that I
> > love (and has POV inside too)
> >
> > This picture is especially nice when printed.
> >
> > ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> > [Image]
>
> --
> Ich nicht eine Sekunde!!!" H. Heinol in Val Thorens
--
omniVERSE: beyond the universe
http://members.aol.com/inversez/homepage.htm
mailto:inv### [at] aolcom?Subject=PoV-News
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