Quote:
Originally Posted by dissentowner
They have already done it on monitors throughout the world. It's been done man.
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There's a huge difference between a monitor that you have to have your head in a precise spot and what I'm describing.
I'm not going to compromise my TV viewing experience for some gimmicky 3D effect.
I'd rather wear glasses than have to worry about keeping my head in an exact spot anyway. I wear glasses all the time anyway.
What I'm saying is that there is always going to be compromises in trying to get glasses free 3D from a TV. Compromises that cannot be eliminated, without a complete change in technology. I'm never going to buy a TV that has such compromises, and 3D TV will never become any kind of standard with such compromises.
I'd much rather have the 4k tv without the fancy lenses in front that bring the image back down to hd quality.
Again, in my mind, for a glasses free 3d tv to be acceptable it must meet these standards:
-Must be able to have your head wherever you want to see the effect.
-Picture quality must be as good as a regular 2d tv, for both 2d and 3d
-wherever you go, your left eye must only be able to see the intended left eye picture, and your right eye must only be able to see the intended right eye picture.
The physical limitations of what is possible without an active, adaptive system mean that current glasses free TVs cannot meet any of those three, though I suppose you could say that it meets the second if the tv compensates for the lost brightness, and you have your head in the correct spot.