As a kid, we practiced seeing the 3D image in our grandparents stereo photos without the viewer. It was enjoyable to watch the images in this presentation in 3D.
It used an autostereoscopic screen via parallax barrier and there are other examples that predate it and follow it. The concept of the parallax barrier dates back to 1896 and first working example in 1901. Sharp produced LCD screens with a parallax barrier for autostereoscopic 3D viewing and even sold a laptop with the screen in the early 2000s. In 2009, Fujifilm released the Fujifilm FinePix Real 3D W1 digital camera, which features a built-in autostereoscopic LCD screen for previewing. A Toshiba 21-inch 3D TV that used a parallax barrier technology with 9 pairs of images, to cover a viewing angle of 30 degrees, was released in 2010. Nintendo also implemented a parallax barrier on its portable gaming console, the Nintendo 3DS, in 2011, the same year as the HTC Evo 3D, LG Optimus 3D and Thrill, and Sharp Galapagos phones with these autostereoscopic 3D screens.
1:11:30 I used to do that with my keyboard. :-) They keys become larger and larger. Thanks to Dr. May, I've much more interesting objects to stare at now!
My copy of the book arrived today and I was saving this presentation to watch before I cracked it open. Perfect!
As a kid, we practiced seeing the 3D image in our grandparents stereo photos without the viewer. It was enjoyable to watch the images in this presentation in 3D.
Agreed, free viewing is a good time, both parallel and crossed depending
Fabuleux, merci pour ce partage. Cette conférence est captivante.
HTC years ago brought out a phone (HTC Evo 3D) that had 3d camera and 3d screen. it never took off
It used an autostereoscopic screen via parallax barrier and there are other examples that predate it and follow it. The concept of the parallax barrier dates back to 1896 and first working example in 1901. Sharp produced LCD screens with a parallax barrier for autostereoscopic 3D viewing and even sold a laptop with the screen in the early 2000s. In 2009, Fujifilm released the Fujifilm FinePix Real 3D W1 digital camera, which features a built-in autostereoscopic LCD screen for previewing. A Toshiba 21-inch 3D TV that used a parallax barrier technology with 9 pairs of images, to cover a viewing angle of 30 degrees, was released in 2010. Nintendo also implemented a parallax barrier on its portable gaming console, the Nintendo 3DS, in 2011, the same year as the HTC Evo 3D, LG Optimus 3D and Thrill, and Sharp Galapagos phones with these autostereoscopic 3D screens.
What a wonderful presentation. Thanks for sharing!!
Excellent!
1:11:30 I used to do that with my keyboard. :-) They keys become larger and larger. Thanks to Dr. May, I've much more interesting objects to stare at now!