Most new televisions come next year will be using 3D technology. Many of them will feature the 3D active shutter style, where instead of red / cyan (photo) or polarized glasses are a certain type of device that blocks each eye at the same time, the specific image the screen should be back to produce three-dimensional effect. Really? I thought we'd all be calling this terrible idea back when everyone has stopped using VirtualBoy.
Consumer Reports is interesting figures on television announced for next year. The vast majority of new series that will introduce you to leave some types of 3D. And most of what kinds of things are active style shutter. Although LG is working in the style of polarized glasses to see. And some will auto-stereoscopic displays.
Based on an informal evaluation of new product announcements that we've seen so far this year, from 60 to nearly 75 percent of television programming from a producer include 3D capabilities. For example, in the year 23 in LG Electronics announced on TV "31 include 3D (74 percent), and 23 television 37 from Sony today revealed this year will be 3D (62 per cent of its queue waiting). Panasonic (70 percent) and Samsung (60 percent) also followed this trend.
3D impressed me during the time I have memory and I am a little upset that this idea seems to be holding. Do not get me wrong, a full on holographic screen is super excited, but these things 3D false eyes things usually just gives me a headache. The same happened with the last movie I went to see in 3D, Coraline comes to mind. Call me cynical, but it seems that the industry is caught later and more-the ability to be coming to your TV for a couple of dollars bill. Until we have a Holodeck, I'll go out to fix my three dimensions.
Consumer Reports is interesting figures on television announced for next year. The vast majority of new series that will introduce you to leave some types of 3D. And most of what kinds of things are active style shutter. Although LG is working in the style of polarized glasses to see. And some will auto-stereoscopic displays.
Based on an informal evaluation of new product announcements that we've seen so far this year, from 60 to nearly 75 percent of television programming from a producer include 3D capabilities. For example, in the year 23 in LG Electronics announced on TV "31 include 3D (74 percent), and 23 television 37 from Sony today revealed this year will be 3D (62 per cent of its queue waiting). Panasonic (70 percent) and Samsung (60 percent) also followed this trend.
3D impressed me during the time I have memory and I am a little upset that this idea seems to be holding. Do not get me wrong, a full on holographic screen is super excited, but these things 3D false eyes things usually just gives me a headache. The same happened with the last movie I went to see in 3D, Coraline comes to mind. Call me cynical, but it seems that the industry is caught later and more-the ability to be coming to your TV for a couple of dollars bill. Until we have a Holodeck, I'll go out to fix my three dimensions.
