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Big Screen Viewing Effect For Mobile Phone Videos

Clarinase writes "Cellular phone subscribers can now view TV, movies, photos and broadband Internet content with a big screen viewing effect with Kopin CyberDisplay video eyewear from MicroOptical. This sleek eyewear allows users to privately view large-size video or pictures equivalent to a 12-inch screen as seen from three feet away, delivering crisp, full-color video with a 17-degree field of view. This eyewear is connected to a cell phone through a thin cable, and allows up to five hours of video with three AAA batteries. Since it accepts composite video input (NTSC or PAL), the eyewear can be plugged into other devices with composite video outputs such as portable DVD players."

3 of 230 comments (clear)

  1. One more thing by jfengel · · Score: 4, Informative

    The other thing it's missing is resolution. At 320x240, that's not really enough to see the visual details you'd want if you're going to play the game well.

    Presumably that's part of the reason it is so much smaller and lighter than your present unit (in addition to the lack of motion tracking.)

  2. Re:Hello, Headaches by wowbagger · · Score: 4, Informative
    Five hours with your eyes focused at two inches away? No thanks.


    It does not work that way. The optics adjust the needed eye relief such that the focus distance is a couple of feet - so this is no worse than looking at your monitor.

    That's why these displays aren't just the LCOS display hanging in front of your eyes - you need the lenses to change the focus.
  3. Re:IMAX movies make me want to puke by wowbagger · · Score: 4, Informative
    Having larger than life moving pictures in front of me makes me really motion sick.


    That is one of the things that displays like this are very GOOD for - they don't induce motion sickness as much as an IMAX would.

    The problem with IMAX is that your entire visual field is filled with the movie - your eyes tell you "we are moving" and your inner ear says "bull! We are sitting still." This confusion of input overstimulates the vestibular system, and Ralf's your uncle.

    With head mounted displays like this, you see the real world around you as well as the display - so your eyes no longer indicate you are moving, but report "This object in my view is moving - we are stationary." Your inner ear agrees, and you don't get sick.

    This is also why people are advised in IMAX theaters to look at their feet if they get sick - this brings your eyes and inner ear into sync again. The problem is that too many people don't keep looking at their feet until they are fully resynced.