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Posts Tagged ‘3D’

Glasses-free 3D TVs on 2015 horizon

Monday, June 21st, 2010

Taiwan’s Industrial Technology Research Institute (ITRI) recently showed a 42-inch glasses-free 3D LCD TV, and the company can currently make them with screens as large as 65 inches, according to Stephen Jeng, director of ITRI’s 3D System & Application Division, quoted on the IDG News service. He reckons that 3D glasses-free system will enter the consumer market by 2015.

ITRI’s technology will likely start being used in 3D digital photo-frames and digital billboards, some of these are already available on the market.

The glasses-free system – also known as autostereoscopic – uses parallax barrier technology to create the 3D effect on the TV. The 3D LCD TV on display from ITRI showed pictures of objects from software converted into a 3D image. The image was blurry and the technology appears to still be a long way from being ready, report IDG News.

In March, 3D Eye Solutions, a service provider and integrator for the 3D stereo and auto-stereo media industry, began beta testing for its glasses-free 3D application for video game platforms such as Nintendo Wii, Apple iPhone, Mac and PC.

Also, Singapore-based technology company Sunny Ocean Studios is currently developing the world’s first 3D cinema in which the audience will no longer require any special glasses. At CeBIT the company presented this autostereoscopic technology on a 27-inch monitor.

Sharp first released a no-glasses 3D system in 2002. Intel, among other companies, have demonstrated glasses-free 3D solutions before, but none are advanced enough to get out onto the market and rival the glasses-based solutions now.

Source DVD Intelligence

Blu-ray Disc Association unveils 3D logo

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

3D-BluRayThe Blu-ray Disc Association has unveiled the new logo for the Blu-ray 3D standard, which was ratified in December. The specification allows for 1080p resolution delivery to each eye while wearing stereoscopic glasses, and will work on any compatible 3D display, including LCD, OLED and Plasma.

Blu-ray 3D also specifically calls for PlayStation 3 consoles to have full BD 3D content playback. According to CDRinfo:  “Additionally, the specification supports playback of 2D discs in forthcoming 3D players and can enable 2D playback of Blu-ray 3D discs on the large installed base of Blu-ray Disc players currently in homes around the world.”

“The Blu-ray 3D specification calls for encoding 3D video using the Multiview Video Coding (MVC) codec, an extension to the ITU-T H.264 Advanced Video Coding (AVC) codec currently supported by all Blu-ray Disc players. MPEG4-MVC compresses both left and right eye views with a typical 50% overhead compared to equivalent 2D content, and can provide full 1080p resolution backward compatibility with current 2D Blu-ray Disc players,” CDRinfo adds.

The specification also incorporates enhanced graphic features for 3D. These features provide a new experience for users, enabling navigation using 3D graphic menus and displaying 3D subtitles positioned in 3D video.

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