Battle lines will be drawn at next month’s CES in between 3D displays at every corner, and the two fundamental adversaries are glasses-free 3D vs 3D tech with glasses. Autostereo-scopic 3D is used with 3D digital photo frames and the built-in displays on 3D cameras. Previously it had been seen only in commercial applications, like digital signage and billboards.
The 3DS will be coming out next year, and will really make people aware of the fact that you can get a similar experience to watching a movie with 3D glasses as you can without them, if you have the right hardware. In steps iPONT, a company that’s focusing on glasses-free 3D. iPONT will be at the Las Vegas Convention Center showing off its “multi-view” autostereo-scopic tech. One of the most publicized problems with glasses-free 3D is that you have to look directly head-on at the display to get the proper effect. But iPONT says its solution would allow viewing the display from an angle of up to 120 degrees. The company claims that’s a world first. iPONT says it will be showcasing 3D YouTube videos, Blu-ray content, as well as streaming video at its CES booth. Looks like the stereoscopic (glasses-required) 3D tech proponents will come swinging heavy against this smaller firms like iPONT. Can anyone say format war?
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