Discussion
Apparently none of the manufacturers will be producing new TV's that have 3D capability anymore
http://uk.businessinsider.com/3d-tv-is-dead-2017-1...
http://uk.businessinsider.com/3d-tv-is-dead-2017-1...
It s brilliant, as long as the depth of field/view effect is just right. Better get Busy hoovering up good titles And catching up.
I did hear of an industry demo where a Tv that did not need glasses was on display, few years ago now. Picture was pin sharp I. 3D and HD. Just cost a lot.
I did hear of an industry demo where a Tv that did not need glasses was on display, few years ago now. Picture was pin sharp I. 3D and HD. Just cost a lot.
jmorgan said:
It s brilliant, as long as the depth of field/view effect is just right. Better get Busy hoovering up good titles And catching up.
I did hear of an industry demo where a Tv that did not need glasses was on display, few years ago now. Picture was pin sharp I. 3D and HD. Just cost a lot.
I remember seeing an LG screen around 2009 that was 3D that didn't need glasses. As long as you were directly in front of it it worked well....I did hear of an industry demo where a Tv that did not need glasses was on display, few years ago now. Picture was pin sharp I. 3D and HD. Just cost a lot.
Just bought a Sony XD93, and I must admit I didn't even look at the 3D capabilities of it - we tried it on the old set to make sure it worked, then didn't touch it again in 3 years. HDR looks far more useful imo.
Great hype for the manufacturers to drive sales whilst developing an even more high resolution format for 2D viewing (i.e. 4k) and screen type (OLED). Needed a massive screen and you needed to sit very close and straight on for it to have any chance of working so basically a family couldn't watch together for example. And 99% of people didn't have a screen big enough...
Totally flawed from day one....which makes you wonder about all the "experts" who got so excited about reviewing the product and couldn't see it for what it was. An overly hyped technology which never was anything more than a stop gap.
Totally flawed from day one....which makes you wonder about all the "experts" who got so excited about reviewing the product and couldn't see it for what it was. An overly hyped technology which never was anything more than a stop gap.
Unless it's truly holographic, I'm not interested in anything supposedly '3D' and never really have been.
The only contemporary 3D movie I've seen is Avatar and even at a proper IMAX theatre, I found it a bit meh.
We're still some way from practical and affordable holographic TV. I'm pretty sure it won't happen in my lifetime.
The only contemporary 3D movie I've seen is Avatar and even at a proper IMAX theatre, I found it a bit meh.
We're still some way from practical and affordable holographic TV. I'm pretty sure it won't happen in my lifetime.
anonymous said:
[redacted]
Disagree with your disagreement! 
It looks great on a properly set up Panasonic 55 inch VT plasma in a darkened room (how films are meant to be watched).
Whether it's Avatar, Promethius, Despicable Me, any number of other animated films, I for one really enjoy watching in 3D.
In fact, on reading this thread, I headed over to Amazon and now await the imminent arrival of TT3D: Closer to the Edge, and MIB3 in 3D.
The trouble I had with 3D was two fold: Firstly it gave me a terrible headache when I tried active glasses with a projector. Secondly most of the 3D films just weren't the sort of thing I'd want to watch, things like Avatar and various animated films aren't my thing. I also briefly owned a 3D LCD TV, which was passive (didn't give me the headaches, but at 50" it was a bit underwhelming compared to a projector), shame that the 2D picture was so bad I returned it and exchanged it for a 2D only set with a decent picture.
On the plus side I think I saved about £300 by choosing not to buy the 3D glasses and RF transmitter that came with my previous projector. Didn't seem to have any problem selling it without them either, so I guess I'm not alone.
On the plus side I think I saved about £300 by choosing not to buy the 3D glasses and RF transmitter that came with my previous projector. Didn't seem to have any problem selling it without them either, so I guess I'm not alone.
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