3D TV For The Masses?
scubacuda writes: "Technology Review has an article on new software that could make 3D television a reality. Previously encumbered by an expensive process that takes up to nine cameras per scene, a company called DDD now takes existing 2D film and creates a "depth map" for each frame. A TV that can handle this sort of software rendering currently costs $25K, but DDD estimates that in a few years, a 3D TV could only cost only 20% more than its 2D counterpart."
Quick, Invest in the Playboy Channel!
"UNIX was not designed to stop you from doing stupid things, because that would also stop you from doing clever things."
3D pr0n. i'm waiting.
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You can probably go to a lot of theaters and get those goggles to watch a 3D movie. And I'm pretty sure those paper goggle thingys are dirt cheap, and the 3d movie is just made with 2 cameras & projectors instead of 1, so why would it cost $25k to make a funky little algorithm that can handle 2 CRT's and a dime store goggle set?
I'm the Devil the Windows users warned you about.
Imagine the bandwidth we are going to need to DL stolen copies of these babies.
All at a time when cable companies are trying to wind back bandwidth useage.
Fun.
Quick, Invest in the Playboy Channel!!
I'm tired of looking at a flat screen that tries to emulate reality. I want my meta/cyberverse now, damn it. We can't be that far off from such an advance. A decade at most. And when we get it, it'll change everything. Direct sensory input to the human nervous system would be the ultimate technology. The bridgestone between this age and the next.
Imagine being able to import such images. It would require either work to edit the 3-d shape so it had a "back" & smooth the shape a little, or else software to interpolate multiple images from different angles into one high resolution 3-d shape - but the opportunity to get a wide variety of shapes to start the process of modelling would be of great benefit to many artists and designers.
Of course, the flip side to all this would be that individuals and organizations may start copyrighting shapes in addition to images. The first court cases over something "shaped like" a copyrighted object will be very interesting.
:^)
Ryan Fenton
This sucks. I hate 3d stuff. Without two working eyes, it's difficult to get the depth perception, etc nessary for this sort of thing to work. :( or should that be .(
At the moment, people and computers add the 3D information to the film. To get it automatically added when the scene is filmed, you're still going to need fancy equipment, extra cameras or whatever. The display may cost 20% more, but how much more will the production cost and so how much will be filmed in 3D?
Now my favorite pr0n star's cup size is REALLY gonna matter!
Sorta adds a new dimension that TV will poke your eye out, or was that the red rider bb gun?
When viewing stereo images in the lab (3D displays of biological molecule structures) we wear special goggles. They work fine; none of that red and blue crap. If you're trying to find early adopters for a new tech, I'd think that 3D goggles plus software to display these movies on a computer would net you much more market penetrance than $25,000 dual-display televisions (or other expensive hardware gimmickry) which are only going to become cheaper if people start buying them, which they'll only do if content is available for them, which will open happen if there's some cheaper way to view the things. One of them vicious things, only good.
Of course, they're using MPEG format. That may mean nothing, or it may mean that they're tied to the MPAA somehow, so encouraging people to watch movies on their computers may not be their business plan. I'm just spouting, I know nothing about "DDD".
In fact, since it looks like HDTV is not going to be a vehicle for DRM, the movie/TV industry could try to develop and deploy some 3D display standard that shut out computers (using patents on the underlying technology), and move all new content into it. Frightening possibility.
The good and new comes from no quarter where it is looked for, and is always something different from what is expected.
Soooo, how is what they're doing different than creating bump maps using legions of digital artists for all scenes of the movie?
Seems to me it'd be as realistic, too.
Now it seems that this is not very far away! It maked me wonder what will happen to the human mind. It is common knowledge that reading books stimulates one's imagination a lot more than watching today's TVs or movies, for example. What will happen when we leave our children to enter "holodeck-fairy-tale-land".
It seems man will start to become distant from nature. Is this a good or a bad thing? What are the consequences for a kid growing up in this new virtual "environment"?
I definately the advantages to a hologram world, like visiting places you could not otherwise visit, and experience new things, but maybe this process has to be carefully thought out.
I guess the a Matrix world is closer then I imagined...
Ok, its been.. what? 15 years? since they started talking about HDTV? And you expect the people who can't even agree on a simple hi-def format to adopt and commercialize this?
Hehe.. ok. I'll put this in the pile with all of the other schemes that are "only 5 years away".
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It's hard enough (so much so that nobody's done it yet) to automatically recover a fully accurate depth map from a general stereo pair of still images, let alone a single still image.
Don't believe the sales pitch. At the moment, automated depth mapping techniques are primitive and unreliable.
http://www.ddd.com/technology/tech_main_frm.htm
"Stage 3:
Refining
The DDC data generated by Stage 2 may be refined manually, finalizing the optimal basis for a 3D equivalent of the original 2D content."
Or in other words:
"we do stereo conversion the same way everyone does and has done since it all began - by hand"
This isn't news.
my tv already is 3-D.
I want it to get more 2-D !!!
:)
Demand more linuxxx! takeittux.jpg isn't enough! Demand more linuxxx!
Having spent the last 8 years developing content preparation technology for 3D presentation systems, I'd like to add my 2 cents.
The problem with 3D TV, apart from all the viewing paraphenalia, is that it's not wide enough. Even in Imax 3D, with a field of view approaching 80 degrees, directors have problems composing shots that fit in the "viewable pyramid" formed by the viewer's nose and the four corners of the screen. (It's fairly well established that anything in 3D projection that clips this pyramid destroys the illusion of 3D, because one eye view clips before the other, causing the audience to be subconsiously disturbed in their viewing). In any case, the 3D effect only operates within this pyramid.
This company has been pumped on and off for some time on various message boards that cover 3D - especially Imax boards. AFAIC, maybe their technology will do well on good 3D presentation systems, but TV-sized screens just won't cut it - all the tests I've seen of 3D on a TV are pretty much limited to novelty value.
/stillconfused
No. Well...maybe. Actually, yes. It really just depends.
Why does this feel like another entertainment technology that will take too long to catch on, spend many years fighting through competing propietary implementations, and in the end, obsoleting expensive technology, causing the enduser/little guy to spend more money.
Some days you feel like a Marxist, some days you don't. This would be a yes day.
Leben Sie jetzt die Fragen.
It's all great fun, unless you, like me, happen to be one of the estimated 20 - 40 percent of people who suffer from "simulator sickness". "Simulator sickness" is the virtual world's cousin to motion sickness, and it takes the form of strained eyesight, nausea, vertigo, headaches and vomiting. Of those who suffer simulator sickness, more than half feel only a twinge when watching T2 3D at Universal Studios, or playing Quake 3. For the remainder - still a sizeable percentage - the symptoms are so bad they simply cannot watch these movies, or play these games.
It seems corporate america, and the bearded linux hippie game developers don't really care about the 17-20 percent of us who suffer badly. Somehow, this lack of concern feels familiar. I guess that's because I'm also a member of that other minority, left-handers, who are constantly ignored by most joystick and mouse manufacturers.
The real worry is that the 3D mania will spread not just throughout TV programming and movies, but to other software, and we'll start seeing 3D databases (in fact, they already exist), disk defragmenters and even operating systems. I hope it doesn't go so far.
I know many Slashdot readers love the 3D trend. As a (semi-dormant) programmer, I can't help but admire the realism of modern 3D graphics in movies, on TV, and in game engines. But I hope that developers wake up to the fact that they're making a sizeable slice of their potential customers sick to their stomachs.
The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
This is really exciting news for me, since the 3D games for the master system had gotten my hopes up for 3D tv in my early childhood. After having missles and such fly right out of the screen at you, it always seemed so disapointing going back to watching the A-Team or whatever. Those games gave me an impression I've never been able to shake that 3D TV would be right around the corner, and finally seventeen or so years later I've got some evidence to support that.
It just turns out that my hunch of soon was more along the lines of game release date "soon".
Everything will be taken away from you.
So 3D TV should be out right around the time HDTV is supposed to be "out" (as in widespread).
Somehow I don't think that we can pull off something that big in a few years, when adding a few extra lines of resolution is taking so long. What has it been, over 15 years now that HDTV is a couple years off?
I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
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English steel beats Danish... urmm... bacon. Bring it on Brazil you overrated showboaters.
sounds kind of like what bump mapping is used for with textures in 3D rendering.
"I would say that 99 per cent of what my father has written about his own life is false." - L. Ron Hubbard Jr.
I saw 3D lenticular displays exhibiting DDD's work at SIGGRAPH 2001 and SID (Society for Information Displays) 2002.
I was not that impressed. Basically you see a large moving stereogram but the stereo separation is no where near as good as your average ViewMaster. Most of the time it doesn't look 3D at all. And your depth of field is very limited when it is 3D.
I talked to them for a while about how their technology works. Basically, they attempt to interpolate around the edges of objects in the foreground. Sometimes they can't and that limits how close to the viewer an object can appear. For example, imagine a camera moving by a tree only a few feet in front of it and with a complex landscape in the background. Around the edges of the tree there should be new landscape that one eye would see and the other would not. There is no way to recover this image data because in the original film it was blocked by the tree. Thin objects, like wires or poles or window frames are also especially difficult. Most of the time it requires an artist to do some hand tuning of the images.
I don't see what is special about their technique. Even if they do have some novel ideas for getting 3D out of 2D, I don't see how the data would be useful considering how bad 3D lenticular displays look - eg. limited depth of field, incorrect focal length for objects at different depths, very limited viewing angle.
*waits to be modded down for making too obscure a joke*
Everything will be taken away from you.
Are there households with 3d TV already? Because if not, then "3d TV for the masses?" doesn't make sense... "3d TV" or "3d TV!" is the concept. "...for the masses" is when the masses get something everyone above them has been enjoying for some time. For instance: "Linux for the masses?" or "Dom Perignon for the masses?"
... " category.
Personally, I'm more in the "3d TV
Video game manufacturers have yet to realize how difficult it is for those with even slight red/green colorblindness to tell the difference between saturated yellow and saturated green. Super Puzzle Fighter is a perfect example.
Web designers are also bad. You know how often I've seen red text in front of a greenish background? Or cyan in front of white?
Even people like me who didn't realize that they had any color defiency until they started using computer and playing video games run into trouble when color is used to convey important information in the digital world.
3D is the same way. There are a sizable percentage of people who are "monocular" and thus are unable to use goggle or lenticular based 3D solutions.
Thats why we should all use:
www.actuality-systems.com
I didn't know how to title this comment properly
Anyway, if you take one camera angle and add to it a heightmap, You will have a 3d view, but only from one angle. You can't rotate the scene or anything like that. Well, you can, but there is no mechanism encoding what, for instance, is on the back of an object. You could do a limited level of rotation on the scene, and it would do neat perspective effects (objects closer to camera would move more than those farther back), however if you rotated around the scene 180 degrees.... yeah you see what I mean.
It would look pretty damn cool looking from the front, however.
Filmmakers often use camera tricks to hide or embellish certain scenes.. A "depth map" would expose these tricks, and in so doing take AWAY one of the fundemental tools that directors have in composing their work. $25K to take power away from the director? Boy, that should catch on like wildfire.
Cheers,
Bowie J. Poag
The main optical depth cues are relative motion, depth of focus, and binocular stereo. If you can provide all three, it looks real, but if you can only provide one, it looks fake. The spherical-mirror illusion, even with projected 2D images, looks more real than binocular stereo. High-end flight simulators have displays that are focused at infinity, which gives you the feeling of looking out at the world, not at a screen. (Low-cost focused-at-infinity displays would be great for gaming, if the optics weren't too bulky.)
Scaling of binocular 3D, where there's far more separation than the usual eye width, is a dramatic effect which is cool for about a minute, then is a pain. This is why the concept died in moviemaking.
Call me a pessimist, but I don't think 3D TV will ever become popular. Something like a holodeck might, where you're inside the simulation, but a 3-dimensional set that you look at from outside probably won't.
I say this because 2D and 3D images are really very similar unless you move your head around, and most people don't want to move their heads around. When people sit down to watch TV, they generally want to just sit there and do nothing.
All it takes is nukes and nerves.
nuff said
That was classic intercourse!
Cool..does this mean I can rotate and zoom in on all sorts of stuff? Probably not :(
O well..not that there's much interesting on on TV these days anyway..2d or 3d
What I wouldn't give to have a 3D TV hooked up through my TVout card, running MAME and playing a rousing round of Pachinko Sexy Reaction (hertofore to be referred to as "the best game ever"). Well, of COURSE you could play Doom or even Quake at lo-rez, but hell, who wouldn't wanna play PSR on a 3D TV?
Fags, that's who.
Why is it when I hit ^R that ZSH calls me a cocksucker?
Anyway, if you take one camera angle and add to it a heightmap, You will have a 3d view, but only from one angle. You can't rotate the scene or anything like that. Well, you can, but there is no mechanism encoding what, for instance, is on the back of an object. You could do a limited level of rotation on the scene, and it would do neat perspective effects (objects closer to camera would move more than those farther back), however if you rotated around the scene 180 degrees.... yeah you see what I mean.
;)
:(
:)
:)
It would look pretty damn cool looking from the front, however.
Actualy this will all be taken care of one day by AI that will be able to interpolate the details in real time.
Until then. . . .
Yah I have seen demonstrations of various '3d from 2d' technologies, and they all do have this problem.
They do look exceedingly cool from that one view angle though.
It actualy is a 3d surface, just a very hollow one.
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I just plain don't believe it. If the information isn't there to begin with, nothing's going to put it there. The "graphic artist" isn't going to be any better than the artists that tint pictures. Splodging an even flesh tint onto a black-and-white face doesn't reproduce the color variations of a real face,and nobody working at commercial pace is going to do more than a slapdash job of "painting" depth into a 2D picture.
Colorized movies look impressive for about five minutes, then you gradually become aware of a sense of dissatisfaction. Your brain knows you're not getting much color information. These "solidized" movies will just as unsatisfying.
In my humble opinion, of course... and not having seen any of the actual product.
"How to Do Nothing," kids activities, back in print!
You're thinking of gaming applications. Nobody rotates anything in realtime either in cinema or (non-live) TV. It's all done long before in some studio.
The point is, can you take a pre-existing bitmap (i.e. one 2D frame) and change it into the two (slightly different) bitmaps - one left eye and one right eye - needed for a 3D presentation system. There is no other view ever needed because no self-respecting movie-maker would ever let you look at a scene from anywhere else except exactly where it was intended to be seen from!
Note that:
1) you can take as long as you want to figure it out, 'cause it's all happening offline.
2) essentially, you're trying to create something from nothing - or at most just some hints.
3) however, you can use earlier or later frames to help. For example, if the camera is moving left, the previous frame makes an excellent right eye view, and the subsequent one can be used for the right eye!
/stillconfused
No. Well...maybe. Actually, yes. It really just depends.
this doesn't sound like it makes models... just takes a 2D image and makes it 3d WITHOUT multiple cameras... to get the backs of objects or to make true models you would need multiple cameras.
1st post = funny
2nd post = offtopic
1st post == 2nd post => funny == offtopic
MARIJUANA, SHROOMS, X: ONLINE?! - E
While 3d would be a blast for games, or cartoons, has anyone ever SEEN 3d holograms of people? You have a suspension of disbelief when seeing a flat 2d screen -- you don't think of them as 5" tall people. People rendered in 3d break this little fantasy the brain has worked up for itself, and you wind up seeing little moveable dolls.
Maybe this effect goes away after a while, and someone with experience watching people as 3d holograms for days at a time (if anyone like that exists) can comment.
So I click on the link and get a screen which says "loading navigation". I hit the back button. 'nuff said.
"The new wave is not value-added; it's garbage-subtracted" - Esther Dyson, Dec 1994
We can define the depth of everything on the screen by setting a start point and an end point and letting the algorithm interpolate everything in-between? And if it's off? You're either going to end up with a stretched, pixelated mess, or a bunch of anorexic midgets flying out of your TV.
The idea that so many people have missed is that 3D for its own sake is just a gee-whiz widget.
:)
What they need to be aiming for is immersion.
Immersion is the experience of being inside an environment rather than being an external viewer.
You can get the immersive effect in 2D, and in fact this has been done with great effect by Disney on some of their rides.
What factors influence the experience of immersion? Foremost is a wide viewing angle; this is where most 3D simulators fail. You must see 'reality' everywhere, not floating in box in front of your face. Also very important is proper audio cueing, as much of a human's experience of spatial orientation is from subtle echoes and pitch changes. Other things that I think add more to the experience than 3D is view tracking, an engaging plot line and breeze control. Also, odor control, as in it cant be stinky
Who actually would prefer this to regular 2D? It'd be like destroying a whole artform--sometimes this is necessary for an evolutionary step, but the few 3D movies I've seen were horrible. Part of the magic of 2D movies is the perspective you get from a 3rd person viewer... right?
If it's not shot from a 3d camera, well, it's just not real 3d. There are a couple of companies out there pimping technology that relies on the difference in time it takes for lighter and darker shaded images to be interpreted by the brain, but these methods only work well on video with a good deal of horizontal movement. You can demonstrate this effect when you wear sunglasses and try to climb stairs. If you divide your field of vision between the lighter and darker areas and try to descend a set of stairs, the difference between when the and darker parts of the signal are interpreted can cause subtle but noticable vertigo.
I can't wait for 3d tv, but I've got to doubt any technology that works from an existing 2d source. -dameron
3D on tv?
i can barely handle double Ds on tv.
girls with 3D. how do they _walk_?
no, seriously. it's amazing they got rid of the 9-camera system. i expect high-boobz0r-content-pr0n made for tv to become much more affordable in the coming years. i imagine that you'd need a new tv, like one with a 256:9 aspect just to fit those triple-Ds in any scene.
..production is a lot more than 20% more expensive. Is it?
No I didn't read the article. That's what you're here for.
If you need text styles to communicate then you don't have a message.
> Of course, the flip side to all this would be that individuals and organizations may start copyrighting shapes in addition to images. The first court cases over something "shaped like" a copyrighted object will be very interesting.
Companies already do this. Things like case design of "deluxe" arcade cabinets are often copyrighted to prevent other manufacturers from making ripoffs. For example, Konami holds a copyright on the DDR cabinet - not that it's helped in dealing with the ripoffs from Korea/China/places with a lack of copyright law.
Can you say Pr0n ?
"There is always some madness in love. But there is also always some reason in madness."- Friedrich Nietzsche
Hmm...something that can look at a two dimensional picture and infer depth...
That happens *every time* I look at the TV. What possible value is gained by this? We already perceive 3-dimensionality from a 2-d source through the normal cues (lighting, foreshortening, parallax etc.) and our brains do a good job of solving it, considering that it is an ill-posed problem requiring a domain of knowledge.
Taking a 2-d image, making it into two images, one for each eye, won't do anything other than move the preliminary processing outside the head. I doubt that any computer can match the human visual system, either.
This is somewhat off-topic, but it comes to mind every time someone mentions "3D-TV" - especially a proposal like this, where the marketing message is basically "convert your film/videotape to 3D!"
The problem, as I see it, is that we have developed a specific visual language for film over the last 100 years. Think of the last movie you saw, with its jump-cuts, zooms, pans whatever. Now think of the last 3D movie - or if not that, how holograms are used in Star Wars. The camera either doesn't move at all, or moves freely, like a flight sim. It doesn't jump around, and you tend to stay inside the same scene. While it's a very good point (as already mentioned) that 3D environments can cause simulator sickness (and not even those - my ex-wife used to get vertigo even watching long camera dolly shots in action films) think about how much more disorienting standard film techniques will be when applied to 3D movies.
That implies to me that when 3D does actually work for mass entertainment as a replacement for film and television they will be both immersive (the holograms are around you, rather than stuck in a corner of your room) and considerably slower-paced than modern cinema.
Dude... It isn't as if people aren't wasting enough time in front of that damn tube. And now they're gonna make it 3d?!?!?!?! Why not just build a damn holodeck, like in Star Trek or whatever. Like that one episode, "Ship in a Bottle" (for those of you who don't remember, it's the one where the blind dude and Data ask the computer for a Sherlock Holmes mystery that would be a challenge for Data to solve. And the computer gave it to them. I would have just asked for a bottle of Negra Modelo, but they asked for a bottle with the whole friggen Startrek Enterprise inside.) And when Windows goes crazy, you'll think you're walking around your house, but you're still in the holodeck and weird shit is happening all around. That would be really friggen weird.
Because TV produccers apparently don't want to become LCD producers. Well, I fact, only a few companies can produce LCD displays (of whatever variant).
If TV where just an LCD display connected to a Analog2Digital interface for the good old signals and then a new digital interface that can ask what the TV resolution/depth is and then just send the data to it.
I'm not fully informed, but it all seems to be a problem. How can the computer industry display whatever at whatever resolution (projecting DVDs, Divx, VideoCD, etc. for example) without all that stupid HDTV non-sense? We just need a computerTV. Hey, sounds nice: CTV!
Just dunble a transmeta chip, a cheapo mother an LCD and bundle a TV-in card, saver and you got something that will last more than HDTV and take advange of a lot more features than any TV.
unfinished: (adj.)
I think they should have about 360 degrees of viewing angle, after all, we are talking about 3D movies here :)
unfinished: (adj.)
Read title.
Anyone remember that Batman movie with the 3D TVs that allowed the riddler and two face to learn everybodies secrets?
Over ten years ago in Houston, Texas a tech came into the Channel 13 (if I remember correctly) station to fix a camera which has stopped working. In fixing the camera the guy crossed a couple of wires. When the camera crew turned the camera back on they suddenly had 3D TV! It was like looking through one of those view finders. From what they determined the camera was taking pictures from the two opposite lenses on the camera thus causing the depth to occur.
:-)
Ok! I know you are wondering if this was discovered over ten years ago why aren't we using this technology? The whole thing is in a huge court battle between the TV station, the guy who fixed the camera, and the company the guy worked for! ARGH! The idiots! Couldn't they just settle on percentages, patent the thing to all three groups, and get this stuff out there? *sigh* Guess not. That's why they call them idiots!
Notes:
The TV Station broadcast out a test of the camera thus allowing millions of viewers a glimpse of this miracle of accidental invention. That was the first and last time it was ever seen before the lawsuits started flying.
See! If you throw enough lawsuits at anything it will go away!
The content is not worth it.
And besides, there's no need for 3D since, with the problems of IP ownership, all we'll have to watch from now on are reruns. Its just changes of medium for the same content. They're making live-action movies of cartoons based on comic book characters and showing these on TV. No original thought is allowed to intrude.
500 chanels, all showing YESTERDAY. The content as the matrix for the ads. Valenti's victory.
That's a powerful disincentive for any change in the delivery medium.
Think on that next time you're at the mall listening to music written before you were born being played, badly, over the PA system, paid for by the mall owners. (The MP3 format doesn't have enough audio quality? For this?)
Ted Kazinski was wrong in what he did but right in his reasoning behind it. To paraphrase Tim Leary: "Turn off. Unplug. Drop out."
MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
Digital TV has been broadcasting and available for over 2yrs. For (supposedly) little cost more than standard TV sets.
HDTV supposely has been available too.
So why is it I have known ppl to buy new TV sets, but nobody seems to have bought, nor wanted to buy, an HDTV set.
Good luck trying to claim this will be mainstream in 5 yrs.
A few years ago you could buy 2hb in the shops around here, it had exactly the same effect. Things got 3d on the telly, no expensive hardware or whatever! They stopped selling it when the government declared it a drug. So now whenever we want to watch 3d fx on the telly we have to take the still legal mushrooms.
I get so frustrated of reading about cool new things like this that will really make it feel like we passed the year 2000. Most of the time it just gets hyped and then it fades away. Just think back to when you were small. We all thought that we will have flying cars and holographic tv's etc. Companies try so hard to come up with brilliant ideas but it's either too expensive or they get a slap on the wrist from someone else that claim it was their idea. The last cool thing that really made a difference was cellphones. At the moment the economy is still in a slump worldwide and everyone is just waiting for the next "big" thing . It might be 3G in Telecoms, or whatever, but I think something like this is a step in the right direction. If it works so well, why not throw our old 2D Tv's out the window and switch the whole world over to 3D TV? Especially with CPU power doubling every 18 months, I'm sure it would just be some time and a lot of sales (at competing prices) before everyone would get one. That would drive the price evern lower and open up new markets. I really hope this takes off.
"I used to have that really cool,funny sig
What do you think the dots in (.Y.) are?
A depth-map isn't good enough for real 3D. When something is close, one eye sees things behind it which the other eye can't see. That's how stereographic 3D images work, and that's how your brain needs the data presented. Because of this, any manufactured depth perception based only on a depth-map will necessarily be a poor trade-off between depth and quality.
The processing which would be required to present this "depth" data in a viewable form would be considerable as well.
Since a depth-map is going to require just as many pixels (perhaps with a lesser bit-depth) as a full image, why not just transmet full stereoscopic images instead? They'd require only slightly more bandwidth and almost no additional processing, and they'd result in a real 3D image.