Facelift Image Replacement
Apparently, the SiFR technique has some competition: Facelift Image Replacement. And from the features they're advertising, it looks like SiFR might be in trouble.
I haven't had much time to play with it, but I have to say that at first blush, FaceLift Image Replacement looks pretty impressive as an heir to Scalable Inman Flash Replacement (SiFR).
I've used SiFR on a couple of sites before, and while it can create a vast improvement in the visual appeal of a site, it can be a rather painstaking task to get everything perfect.
For those not in the know, both SiFR and FLIR (Facelift Image Replacement) are scripts designed to replace vanilla HTML and CSS elements with representations of text (Flash movies and images respectively) on a web page.
The goal of this is that these representations are capable of using fonts that otherwise might not be available to your site's visitors, while still providing graceful degradation of the content for users whose browsers don't support the technologies the scripts are based on (Javascript in both cases, Flash in SiFR's).
FLIR seems to address a significant number of these problems.
| Tagged with: | Flash, FLIR, Image Replacement, Javascript, Mootools, PHP, Stuff we like, Typography, Web Design |




