On Wednesday, in Japan, Toshiba became first to launch what it calls the world's first television to public, allowing viewers to see 3D images without having to wear special glasses.
It was unveiled at an electronics store in central Tokyo, it's 12-inch model, named as the Regza GL1 Series, went on sale.
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Showing posts with label 3d. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 3d. Show all posts
Beware of 3D TVs, it can disorient you brain: Scientists
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Scientists warns that the 3D content, particularly 3D TVs can disorient the brain, causing eye strain, headaches, nausea and sickness.
The person who is mostly like to be affected by this is the one closer to the screen.
Studies show that in up to 20 percent of the viewers it could even induce physical sickness, the Daily Mail reported, quoting the New Scientist.
The person who is mostly like to be affected by this is the one closer to the screen.
Studies show that in up to 20 percent of the viewers it could even induce physical sickness, the Daily Mail reported, quoting the New Scientist.
World's first 3D camcorder for home movies unveiled
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The 3D revolution has so far been all about Hollywood blockbusters and major sporting events. But now, the cutting-edge technology is coming closer to home.
Treasured moments such as a child's first steps or a university graduation can be captured in 3D with the arrival of the first camcorder - capable of filming in more than two dimensions, says the Daily Mail.
Unveiled by Panasonic Wednesday, the 1,300 pound HDC-SDT750 3D model works using a sophisticated double lens.
Company spokesman Barnaby Sykes said: "Just as we have two eyes, so the 3D camcorder has two lenses side by side. The camcorder acts like the human brain in converging the two images together to create one picture in 3D."
Treasured moments such as a child's first steps or a university graduation can be captured in 3D with the arrival of the first camcorder - capable of filming in more than two dimensions, says the Daily Mail.
Unveiled by Panasonic Wednesday, the 1,300 pound HDC-SDT750 3D model works using a sophisticated double lens.
Company spokesman Barnaby Sykes said: "Just as we have two eyes, so the 3D camcorder has two lenses side by side. The camcorder acts like the human brain in converging the two images together to create one picture in 3D."
Going 3D is the new talk in Adobe.
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The company has revealed it will include 3D support in a future version of the browser plug-in.
The news of the update first leaked out in October’s Adobe Max conference, which includes a presentation entitled “Flash Player 3D Future.”
Adobe product manager Thibault Imbert was first to hint to the presentation in a blog post, but declined to give further details, save for the fact that Adobe will release a “3D API” in a “future version”:
The news of the update first leaked out in October’s Adobe Max conference, which includes a presentation entitled “Flash Player 3D Future.”
Adobe product manager Thibault Imbert was first to hint to the presentation in a blog post, but declined to give further details, save for the fact that Adobe will release a “3D API” in a “future version”:
Watching 3D content at Home with in next 2 years, No Big Deal.
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With the rapid development and advancement of 3D Content arena, watching 3D Media at home will be common sight to see, thanks to Avatar which made the general public to think about it and FIFA WC for raising awareness of the Technology.
Although many believe that consumers will never want to wear 3D glasses at home, and 3D TVs have only been on sale for a matter of months, a combination of factors points to faster adoption of 3D than of previous new technologies.
Unlike high-definition video or the VHS-Betamax battle before it, where deployment was held up for years while movie studios and electronics makers supporting rival formats battled for dominance, 3D presents no such prospect of a format war.
But TVs are already on sale from Samsung that convert two-dimensional signals into 3D in real time, meaning that consumers can already start to enjoy images leaping out of the screen, even with little original 3D content yet available.
Although many believe that consumers will never want to wear 3D glasses at home, and 3D TVs have only been on sale for a matter of months, a combination of factors points to faster adoption of 3D than of previous new technologies.
Unlike high-definition video or the VHS-Betamax battle before it, where deployment was held up for years while movie studios and electronics makers supporting rival formats battled for dominance, 3D presents no such prospect of a format war.
But TVs are already on sale from Samsung that convert two-dimensional signals into 3D in real time, meaning that consumers can already start to enjoy images leaping out of the screen, even with little original 3D content yet available.
German TanDEM-X satellite returns first 3D images
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Choppy Indian Ocean waters (yellow) contrast with the calm Baie de Diego (blue)
Germany's new radar satellite, TanDEM-X, has returned its first images.
The spacecraft was launched from Kazakhstan on Monday on a mission to make the most precise 3D map of the Earth's surface.
The pictures demonstrate the platform is in excellent health and ready to team up with the TerraSAR-X satellite launched in 2007.
Together, the pair will trace the variation in height across the globe to a precision of better than two metres.


1.Moscow-Sheremetyevo airport 2.Fields and forests in Ukraine
The new images depict a landscape in Ukraine, the north of Madagascar, and Moscow.
The pictures illustrate neatly the particular specialism of using radar to sense the planet's surface.
Nintendo 3DS, 3D Gaming Without Glasses [PICS]
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Cool about the 3DS is its 3D slider — a small toggle on the right side of the device that allows you to seamlessly “zoom” up to higher levels of 3D all the way from regular old flat 2D. Not only is the visual transition itself impressive, but the option to play any of your favorite titles at various 3D depth levels.
Transformer 3 revealed,
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entertainment,
hollywood,
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- Transformers 3 is the working title for the third movie in the series, scheduled for release on July 1, 2011. The possibility has been evaluated that the third film will be made in 3-D.
- As we know that there wont been Megan fox in Transformers 3, Rosie Huntington-Whiteley is confirmed as female lead role.
- "Dorky comedy" gone. Twins are "basically" gone.
- Transformers 3 will be the end of a trilogy. Bay says “As a trilogy, it really ends. It could be rebooted again, but I think it has a really killer ending.”
- The main villain in Transformers 3 will be Shockwave.
Src: [tfw2005.com]
Cric X', India's 1st cricket-based 3D animation film .
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Nearly 600 budding animators have developed India's first-ever 3D animation movie on cricket called 'Cric X'.
Students from Maya Academy of Advanced Cinematics (MAAC) worked through nine months and developed the 80-minute feature film under the institute's Mentorship Series `Creative Shop', Mr Sanjeev Waeerkar, the chief creative officer, MAAC, and the creators (students) of the movie said.
'Cric X' is inspired by the popularity and craze people have for cricket in India, they said.
The movie revolves around the fun, excitement and dreams associated with cricket, complete with imaginative, visually appealing and excellent story telling, Mr Waeerkar said.
Students from Maya Academy of Advanced Cinematics (MAAC) worked through nine months and developed the 80-minute feature film under the institute's Mentorship Series `Creative Shop', Mr Sanjeev Waeerkar, the chief creative officer, MAAC, and the creators (students) of the movie said.
'Cric X' is inspired by the popularity and craze people have for cricket in India, they said.
The movie revolves around the fun, excitement and dreams associated with cricket, complete with imaginative, visually appealing and excellent story telling, Mr Waeerkar said.
Toshiba's LCD Panel Displays 2D, 3D Images at Same Time.
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Toshiba Corp developed an LCD panel that can partially convert a 2D image to a 3D image and can be viewed with the naked eye.
The LCD panel was announced at SID 2010, the largest international conference on display technologies that took place from May 23 to 28, 2010, in Seattle, the US.
The LCD panel is compatible with the "integral imaging method," which the Toshiba Group has been developing, and has nine viewpoints. Its screen size is 12 inches. The pixel count is 1,400 x 1,050 for 2D images (full screen) and 466 x 350 for 3D images (full screen).
The panel displays 3D images by using the "GRIN (gradient index) lens," which changes the distribution of refraction indexes by controlling the gradient (orientation) of liquid crystal molecules.
IBM Research creates world's smallest 3D map
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technology,
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WASHINGTON: Scientists claim to have created the world's smallest three dimensional map -- a map of the Earth so small that 1,000 of them could fit on one grain of salt.
A team at computer giant IBM accomplished this through a new, breakthrough technique which uses a tiny, silicon tip with a sharp apex -- 100,000 times smaller than a sharpened pencil -- to create patterns and structures as small as 15 nanometers at greatly reduced cost and complexity.
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