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All glasses-free 3D tech makes me feel this way. The point is: Glasses-free 3D isn't new. It's been tried several times before, and it's still struggling to prove a purpose.
Glasses-free 3D is making a comeback. And please — don’t roll your eyes and write this off as a gimmick just yet.
I'd love to have a no-glasses 3D screen! But not this one: only 27", only 1920px horizontally, only 60Hz … and 3000$ price tag?! I hope it succeeds, so the technology doesn't instantly die.
Samsung’s Odyssey 3D monitor uses a special Light Field Display technology combined with eye-tracking and view mapping to make images pop off the screen and come to life. Sans 3D glasses.
From the times I’ve dabbled with Acer’s implementation of glasses-free 3D, I’ve had fun with it, and I know you would too. But when we get cool ideas in the laptop space, they need to be ...
Brightness in 3D can be tricky. The tinted 3D glasses naturally make things darker, and a good amount of it depends on how well your movie theater is taking care of its 3D projection.
Instead of trying to emulate a movie theater experience, 3D is getting personal, thanks to a little help from Apple and new glasses-free technology. This time, it might stick.
OMAHA, Neb. — As 3D-printing technology evolves, some people are using it to make things more practical. One of the newer creations is 3D-printed glasses.
Beyond the technical limitations of 3D conversion and its inferiority to native 3D, David F. Sandberg also touched on what is without a doubt the most common complaint about 3D: the glasses.
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