[Phil Lelyveld comment: This article is an excellent overview of the current state of autostereoscopic (no glasses) 3D display technology.]
Ever wish you could lose the specs and watch a 3D TV without those annoying glasses?
Analysts at Futuresource Consulting predict that by 2011 the UK will have more 3D TVs than the current front-runners, France and Germany, with one in three homes 3D Ready by 2014 – and a staggering 50 per cent by 2015.
That’s an awful lot of 3D glasses – and at £100 a pop, it’s a serious complaint about the 3D home experience. The solution, of course, is a 3D TV without glasses.
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“Nine views is the current standard, but coming down the pike is 15 views, though that will require more processing and a meaty chip,” says Foster. “It has been suggested that a large screen auto stereoscopic 3D TV could need up to 100 views.”
Exactly how camera rigs would be able to film from that many viewpoints is anyone’s guess.
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Full story here: http://3dradar.techradar.com/3d-tech/3d-tv-without-glasses-explained-02-12-2010
