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3D Display a Little Bit Closer to Reality

arielsebbag writes "According to CNET, Several high-tech companies including Sony and Sanyo have officially unveiled a consortium to create technical and safety standards for bringing three-dimensional displays to desktops, laptops and cell phones. They are probably focusing their efforts on the technology developed by Sharp. It looks like they are actually good to go and hopefully the 3D display will hit the market by 2004."

11 of 206 comments (clear)

  1. What does this mean? by epiphani · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Can someone explain to me a little better what a 3D display is exactly? I dont get it. As far as I'm concerned, my monitor already does 3D.

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    1. Re:What does this mean? by Yosi · · Score: 5, Informative

      These 3-d displays that they are talking about send two different pictures in different directions. In that ways, you get an illusion of parallax so you see depth.

      On a regular moniter, things may be rendered in 3-d, but they are displayed in a flat method. This can be approximated in the real world by closing one eye. With these screens, you get the asme 3-d illusion that you get in a "magic eye", where your brain interprets slight differences in pictures between you two eyes as depth.

      The problems mentioned, such as the fact that it does not know where your eyes are to send the right images to the right places, are being worked on, but eye tracking makes the system much more complicated.

      There are other, more fundemental problems with screens. Among them are that the focus plain is still on the screen, eevn while the sterio says that the image is somewhere else. This can give people headaches.

      <SHAMELESS PLUG>
      I work at that MIT media lab Spacial Imaging Group, who were mentioned previously on slashdot They have a holographic video which in theory works, It has many other problems, including that the person who built it has graduated and moved on. But in theory, that would be the ideal solution.
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    2. Re:What does this mean? by Yosi · · Score: 5, Informative

      No. That was precisely my point. A hologram is a real effect to the point that it has focal planes. In an analog hologram, every piece of information about a light wave, including its direcion and intensity, is saved in a diffraction pattern, that can be read by shining the reference beam again. In a holographic video system, something is causing the exact same diffraction patterns that the holographic plate would have stored.

      The beam is never focused anywhere. It is brought back when the hologram is viewed. The loss of focus planes would come from projecting a focused image on a screen, the first place that happens is your eye. You can focus on the front of a hologram, and the back is out of focus, or visa versa. At my lab they have printed some holograms and messed up the focal planes so they just looked wrong.

  2. Re:Non-gaming usage? by Angry+White+Guy · · Score: 5, Informative

    Cad/Cam Medical Research engraving engineering model building mapping weather forecasting physics civil engineering automobile manufacturing shall I go on?

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  3. Bah! by quantaman · · Score: 5, Funny

    It will never happen! Remember that no technology becomes popular without being embraced by the porn industry and how the heck will the porn industry work with 3D displays?!? It's pointless to think about it I mean it's completely and utterly ridiculo...
    ooh...
    ooohhhhhhh!!!

    ummmm nevermind

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    I stole this Sig
  4. Re:3D cellphones? Please NO... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Dude, time to come out of the closet, maybe?

  5. Does it hurt to use? by jericho4.0 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    We've been seeing 3D display technologies for 50 years. Some have been better than others, but they have all suffered from the same flaw. Namely, that using them for any length of time results in a headache/eye strain. The article notes near the end that this technology is not free of the problem.

    I'm not saying it might not be usefull in the same applications it's usefull in now, but untill I can use one for 6 hours with no eyestrain, I don't think I want one.

    UT2003/3D would be pretty damn cool, though...

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    "A language that doesn't affect the way you think about programming, is not worth knowing" - Alan Perlis
  6. Re:What about poor MS? by thynk · · Score: 5, Funny

    So what you're saying is that 3D pr0n would use... "DirectXXX"?

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    Good judgment comes from experience, and a lot of that comes from bad judgment.
  7. You can already buy them by TunaTime · · Score: 5, Informative

    Seen 3D displays already from 15" LCDs to 50" plasmas from ddd. Check them out at www.ddd.com

  8. Re:Non-gaming usage? by isomeme · · Score: 5, Funny

    Four words: "Blue Cube of Death".

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    When all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a skull.
  9. Dimension Technologies by gmplague · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Dimentions Technologies Incorporated have been selling 3D monitors (without the glasses!) for years. When they first came out they got very favorable reviews, but the major quip was with the price. Well, the prices have come down significantly, and you can get a 15" True 3D flat panel monitor, for $1700, and an 18" for $5000. 32-Bit color, resolutions up to 1024x768 (for the smaller ones), and 1280 x 1024 for the big ones, that's not such a bad deal. Also, it goes from 2D monitor to 3D at the toch of a button. Not bad if you ask me.

    Site is here.

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