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You can now gather around a screen and see digital objects come to life in true three dimensions, no headsets, no glasses, just your eyes and a shared experience with others. That’s exactly what the ...
The best polarized sunglasses will protect your vision without cramping your style, stay put (no matter how much you sweat), and feel so lightweight that you might forget you’re even wearing them.
Passive 3D glasses, on the other hand, are somewhat closer to the pair you wear at the cinema. Their polarized lenses merge two off-set images, creating an illusion of depth.
Depending upon the exact type of technology used, the 3D glasses you wear will either use special shutters, color filters, or polarized lenses to receive the images. Your brain takes care of the rest!
Swave Photonics, a holographic display company, has raised $28.27 million in funding as it prepares components for AI-powered smartglasses and heads-up displays. Swave said the Series A investment ...
Meta Orion glasses: what are these not-quite-ready-for-public-consumption devices really like? I speak to creatives who've used them to get a “hands-on” and unbiased view ...
Perhaps the coolest part is that this tablet doesn't require that photos support 3D right out the gate. It can even convert standard 2D images into 3D on the fly thanks to its Magic Vision engine.
Samsung first showed off the Odyssey 3D at CES in January this year. We've seen several glasses-free 3D TVs over the years, but consumers generally seem uninterested in the technology.
Samsung’s Odyssey 3D monitor uses a special Light Field Display technology combined with eye-tracking and view mapping to make images pop off the screen and come to life. Sans 3D glasses.
If you're interested in buying a 3D TV, you should know before you purchase that there are two types. Here's the difference between active vs. passive 3D TVs.