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Sharp Develops Triple Directional Viewing LCD

morpheus83 writes "Sharp Corporation and Sharp Laboratories of Europe, Ltd. (SLE) have developed the Triple Directional Viewing LCD, a display that controls the viewing angle so that the display can show different images from the left, right, and center simultaneously. Using proprietary parallax barrier on a standard TFT LCD, the screen splits light in three directions — left, right, and center — and displays three separate images on the same screen at the same time. So connect three computers to the LCD and from the center you see Windows, Linux from the left and MacOS from the right."

7 of 220 comments (clear)

  1. Laptops? by bahwi · · Score: 5, Funny

    Forget the privacy filter, Goatse on the left, Goatse on the right, and that commercial would be far more interesting!

    1. Re:Laptops? by icebrain · · Score: 5, Funny

      Or conversely... I could look at porn and the people sitting to the left and right of me would see legitimate work... now just sit back and imagine the possibilities...

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      The meek may inherit the earth, but the strong shall take the stars.
  2. Very fancy - BUT by grims · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is all very fancy, but wont viewing from sides reduce the surface amount you are watching? A 1024x768 from front wont be the same at 45 degree angle - loss of resolution - and compressed faces/picture etc.? How is that solved?

    1. Re:Very fancy - BUT by jacobw · · Score: 5, Insightful
      According to Sharp's PR, one possible use is as a dashboard display in your car:
      So while driving you can see the GPS navigation your kid at the backseat can enjoy Ace Combat on his PS2 while your wife in the passenger seat checks out tourist sites and restaurants all in full-screen view.

      That makes a certain amount of sense to me; with viewers essentially strapped in place, you can make sure everybody sees exactly the perspective they're supposed to. Also, in those circumstances, you aren't going to demand especially high resolution--as long as you can make out the information presented, you're OK. (Admittedly, the kid in the backseat playing on his PS2 might want better resolution, but that's his problem. In my day, if we wanted to play PS2, we had to actually get out of our car and walk inside.)

      They also mention the possibility of using it for displaying multiple ads in public, so that the ad you see varies depending on whether you are coming ("You're just a few feet away from Joe's Cafe!") or going ("Turn around! You just missed the best restaurant in town!").
    2. Re:Very fancy - BUT by SilentOneNCW · · Score: 5, Funny

      Is no one at all even remotely worried that this hypothetical situation includes all three people in a vehicle looking at a display instead of the road?

  3. Re:Cereal box kids toy cards by jimstapleton · · Score: 5, Insightful

    you pretty much got my main thoughts right there. What worries me is the same problem as with the cerial box cards - there is some bleedover of the image from off angels. Would the same thing happen here? I can just see all the posters here who suggested goatse doing that, and then having the image of goatse subconciously burned into their mind because there is a very minor image bleed of it...

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  4. Ultra Extreme Programming by javaxjb · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's clearly intended for ultra extreme programming: one wide desk and three keyboards. The programmers on the left and right write the code and the person in the center works on continous merges of the best ideas. A fourth back seat drivers continuously runs from left to right giving directions and asking why they aren't just checking the UML.

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