News
Toshiba’s 12-inch and 20-inch no-glasses 3D televisions were on display at Ceatec 2010 in Japan last week. Toshiba demonstrated the TVs at last week’s Ceatec electronics show in Japan, and we ...
Quite frankly, 3D glasses have never failed to be anything but a headache inducing, slightly blurry mess for me. That might be why a recent demo of a new glasses-free 3D TV from Ultra-D blew me away.
Instead, more of the 3D layers looked as if they receded into the background. Glasses-free 3D viewing angles Like a giant Nintendo 3DS, the HiSense GF60XT980 looked better when standing in front ...
No, you cannot use 3-D movie glasses to view the Great American Eclipse, and regular sunglasses will not work either. Here's why. Newsletters Games Share a News Tip ...
When it comes to cinematic 3D experiences, glasses aren't necessarily the most accessible method. However, while glasses-free 3D does exist, like in Nintendo's 3DS, current methods are not easily ...
South Korean researchers create way to watch 3D movies with no glasses. Method blocks some light to viewers eyes, creating 3D effect. Current method, using two projectors, is awkward and expensive.
3D is showing up everywhere, from the cineplex to your living room. There's just one problem. Most of the technology still relies on those cumbersome 3D glasses.
3D: No Glasses, All Stupid. By Nicholas Dietz. January 21, 2011 / 5:22 PM EST / CBS News On the hierarchy of nerd fascinations, few things rank higher than 3D ...
3D is going to make its way into B2B technology — but it will blend in and enhance the platform experiences we have come to expect in the cloud-based world.
Critic Linda Holmes has always been a 3D skeptic — the glasses are fiddly and become plastic junk, the gimmicks wear off, it gets distracting, and it introduces opportunities for technical problems.
It hasn’t even been a year since 3D televisions and their accompanying 3D glasses began hitting store shelves, but a development by Toshiba is already threatening to make the 3D glasses obsolete.
South Korean researchers create way to watch 3D movies with no glasses. Method blocks some light to viewers eyes, creating 3D effect. Current method, using two projectors, is awkward and expensive.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results