October 4th, 2008 by
Filed under: Handhelds
Before we go any further, we’d like to inform this here Telson UMPC that if Pandora can finally get out of the starting blocks, so can you. Today, we’re looking at new evidence that Digital Cube (the handheld’s new parent) could be inching ever closer to bringing this shockingly thick gaming handheld to market. Out of seemingly nowhere, images have emerged of the portable posing beside a USB 3D camera dongle (saywha?); additionally, we’re told that it will pack a 1.2GHz VIA C7M CPU and feature a 4.3-inch display, 512MB of RAM, 30GB hard drive and Windows XP. Oh, and we’re also informed that it’ll be “released in October” in at least one section of the world, so we’ve got T-minus 27 days to see if that claim is legit.
[Via Pocketables]
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Posted in release, umpc, prototype, 3d, us, usa, digital cube, DigitalCube, gaming handheld, GamingHandheld, 3d gaming, 3dGaming, telson | No Comments »
October 3rd, 2008 by
Filed under: Displays, HDTV, Home Entertainment
Betcha didn’t see this one coming, did you Philips? No sooner than the aforementioned company unveiled a rather striking 56-inch Quad Full 3D HDTV over on the left coast of the US did Japan’s National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT) and JVC Victor one-up that with a 72-inch prototype of their own. Revealed at CEATEC 2008, the Full HD (1,920 x 1,080) set doesn’t even require viewers to sport those face-consuming glasses to experience the effect. In essence, the display utilizes multiple projectors to really emphasize that elusive third-dimension, but the viewing angle is understandably limited. Oh, and we hope you’re not too geeked up about this — NICT stated that we probably wouldn’t see these in the commercial realm before 2011. Ah well, at least there’s IMAX to hold us.
[Via Gearlog]
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Posted in japan, jvc, 1080p, ceatec, 3d, jvc victor, JvcVictor, nict, 3d hdtv, 3dHdtv, ceatec 2008, Ceatec2008 | No Comments »
October 1st, 2008 by
Filed under: Displays, HDTV

Digital Cinema Implementation Partners (DCIP) — representing AMC, Cinemark and Regal Cinemas — has worked out a deal to finance the installation of thousands of digital movie screens starting next year in the U.S. with the help of Lion’s Gate, Paramount, Fox, Universal and Disney. Not participating, at least for now, are Warner Bros. and Sony Pictures, with the latter expected to announce a separate deal soon involving the installation of Sony 4K SXRD projectors around the world. Key to the deal? “Virtual print” fees, meant to help defray the expect $70,000 cost to switch to 3D-ready digital projection setups, as the studios will kick in the $800 - $1000 they would have spent on old school movie prints to finance the changeover. In the future they save by distributing only digital prints, not to mention having somewhere to show the dozen 3D flicks expected to debut next year. Both sides are betting the $1 billion package will help pull us away from the HDTVs and back into a movie theater, but until they work out a payoff with that one guy who won’t stop talking, we’re not sure how likely that is.
Read - Wall Street Journal
Read - Reuters
Read - Variety
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Posted in 3d, 4k, digital, projection, cinema, dcip, digital cinema implementation partners, DigitalCinemaImplementationPartners, movie theater, MovieTheater, virtual print, VirtualPrint | No Comments »
September 24th, 2008 by
Filed under: Displays, HDTV, Home Entertainment
Didn’t see anything that particularly suited your fancy at CEDIA? Then feast your eyes on CEATEC. As the Japan-based trade show hastily approaches, out pops a mind-boggling new home theater package from Panasonic. The system will include one of its marvelous 103-inch plasma HDTVs, a Blu-ray player and at least one set of fancy 3D goggles. Hailed as a world’s first in some form or fashion, the Full HD 3D package utilizes an undisclosed format “employed by major Hollywood film studios” to “distribute full HD images of 1,920 x 1,080 pixels to each eye via synchronized shutter glasses.” Panny is hoping to promote the technology and possibly get a leg up on Samsung (our assumption) by impressing wealthy homeowners and members of the Blu-ray Disc Association. As expected, there’s no mention of a price, but rest assured — you’ll be stuck choosing between this and a new BMW.
[Via Impress]
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Posted in japan, Blu-ray, panasonic, 103-inch, 1080p, plasma, ceatec, 3d, Matsushita, Home Theater, HomeTheater, bd, blu-ray player, Blu-rayPlayer, bda, full hd, FullHd, ceatec 2008, Ceatec2008 | No Comments »
September 22nd, 2008 by
Filed under: Digital Cameras
As the announcements continue to flow from Cologne, Fujifilm is vying for some time in the limelight with two introductions of its own. The FinePix Real 3D system is built around a “newly-developed 3D processor and a twin-lens camera concept” which enables 3D capture and even 3D printing. As of now, no actual products have been revealed to take advantage of the technology, but it’s evidently just a matter of time before your images are literally hanging off of your future digital photo frame. Moving on, we’ve got the Super CCD EXR, a “three-in-one” sensor that supposedly provides high resolution, high sensitivity and wide dynamic range. Essentially, this could lead to ultracompact cameras that provide stunning image quality without injecting high levels of noise in low-light scenarios, but sadly, there’s no actual Super CCD EXR-infused camera to swoon over just yet. Check out every last detail in the links below.
Read - Super CCD EXR
Read - FinePix Real 3D System
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Posted in 3d, concept, finepix, fujifilm, photokina, photokina 2008, Photokina2008, FinePix Real 3D, FinepixReal3d, Super CCD EXR, SuperCcdExr | No Comments »
September 16th, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming, Peripherals
We’re tempted to say that peripheral makers are taking this whole motion controlling thing a touch too far, but we suppose there’s no stopping “progress,” huh? In2Games, the outfit that already sought to bring motion sensing to the PS2, has just unveiled the first image of its motion controller for the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3. The Wii Nunchuck-esque Gametrak Freedom is explained as being a “remarkable ultrasonic 3D motion sensing technology which delivers performance, control and flexibility far in excess of that offered by existing technologies.” Supposedly, the device tracks the true 3D position and “precise movements of up to four players anywhere within a given environment,” though it remains to be seen how much support it’ll get from software developers. Initially, the controller will launch alongside undisclosed titles that can utilize the tech, but as for now, all you have to look forward to is Squeeballs. Yes, Squeeballs.
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Posted in Microsoft, playstation 3, Playstation3, ps3, sony, xbox 360, Xbox360, controller, 3d, motion sensing, MotionSensing, ultrasonic, motion controller, MotionController, 3d controller, 3dController, Freedom, gametrak freedom, GametrakFreedom, In2Games | No Comments »
September 16th, 2008 by
Filed under: Portable Video
Although the iWear AV310 Widescreen from Vuzix isn’t the first 3D HMD we’ve come across, or the largest virtual display (likened to a 52′ screen viewed from 9-feet), it’s the first 16:9 widescreen version to hit the market. Equipped for use with both NTSC and PAL, this unit will run you about $250 and has a mysterious “video” input for use with a wide range of devices, though there’s currently nothing to say what style of connector can be used or what resolution it runs at. Oh well… we’re still waiting on a headtracking version anyway.
[Thanks, Greg]
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Posted in hmd, 3d, Vuzix, widescreen, iWear, AV310, iWear AV310 Widescreen, IwearAv310Widescreen, vuzix iwear, VuzixIwear, wearable display, WearableDisplay | No Comments »
September 8th, 2008 by
Filed under: Displays
Barco has a knack for stopping shows, and while Tokyo’s Industrial Virtual Reality expo didn’t exactly shut down, we can only imagine how many folks took the time to check out the CADWall concept. Hailed as a “multi-channel display system with a high pixel density that consists completely of Barco technology,” said system utilizes a pair of LX-5 projectors, a superflat high-contrast screen and just two-channels to create a 10-megapixel 3D stereo image. Sure beats six or eight to make the third-dimension come to life, huh?
[Via AboutProjectors]
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Posted in projector, 3d, pj, stereoscopic, virtual reality, VirtualReality, LCOS, 3d stereo, 3dStereo, barco, CADWall, passive 3d, Passive3d | No Comments »
August 13th, 2008 by
Filed under: Displays, HDTV, Home Entertainment
São Paulo, Brazil stand up, you’re first in line for auto-stereoscopic (read: no glasses) 3D IPTV broadcasts courtesy of Telefónica/TVA and, we assume, that swank WOWvx-powered 1080p 52-inch Philips 3D HDTV promised to hit shelves by year end. Fortunately it now has a price, unfortunately, that price is €18,000 and requires you live in the Jardins neighborhood, hooked up to its fiber network in order to have the capacity to suck down all that 3D. Consumer accessibility is pegged at “inside three or four years”, so you start saving, the SMPTE will figure out how to make it all work, and we’ll sit back and remember how awesome Captain EO was that one time at Epcot Center. Everyone has to do their part.
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Posted in 1080p, 3d, fiber, sao paulo, SaoPaulo, 3 d, auto stereoscopic, AutoStereoscopic, captain eo, CaptainEo, jardins, philipcs, telefonica | No Comments »
August 10th, 2008 by
Filed under: Displays, Misc. Gadgets
2008 has been somewhat of a banner year for 3D, but the brilliant minds at MIT are already working up a system that’ll put U23D to shame. Hailed as a “super-realistic image system,” the invention produces “6D” images that not only have a full three-dimensional appearance, but also “respond to their environment, producing natural shadows and highlights depending on the direction and intensity of the illumination around them.” Without relying on electronics or active control, the process could be used to produce images with an “unprecedented degree of realism” — resulting in something associate professor Ramesh Raskar calls the “ultimate synthetic display.” As expected, initial applications for the ultra-pricey ($30 per pixel, currently) system revolve around digital signage / advertising, but it’s really just a matter of time before Six Dimensions of The Jonas Brothers hits a cinema near you. Save us.
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Posted in university, advertising, mit, research, 3d, digital signage, DigitalSignage, imaging, 6D, image system, ImageSystem, imaging system, ImagingSystem | No Comments »
August 5th, 2008 by
Filed under: Displays, HDTV, Home Entertainment
Although high-end projection makers have been figuring out this whole 3D beaming thing for awhile now, Lightspeed Design and InFocus are looking to bring the technology to a wider audience with the introduction of its DepthQ stereoscopic 3D projectors. Available in XGA and WXGA flavors, these PJs promise “rock-solid, 120Hz stereo 3D at 1,280 x 720 or 1,024 x 768 resolution” and feature Texas Instruments’ DLP / BrilliantColor technologies, a 2,000:1 contrast ratio and a total weight of just 6.9-pounds. Best of all, these undercut most other single-lens 3D projectors by coming in somewhere under $6,000 apiece, though exact numbers have yet to be disclosed.
[Via AboutProjectors]
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Posted in projector, 3d, pj, stereoscopic, dlp, InFocus, 3d projector, 3dProjector, depthq, DepthQ-WXGA, DepthQ-XGA, Lightspeed, Lightspeed Design, LightspeedDesign | No Comments »
June 24th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
You don’t have to be a science buff to understand that atoms in gases move around a heck of a lot more than those in solids. For instance, text on a paper page isn’t apt to just reshuffle itself when no one is looking, but printing the latest Harry Potter novel on thin air could prove just a touch more difficult. Said challenge isn’t too much for physicists from varying institutions in Israel, as they have recently demonstrated how to ever-so-briefly store images in a warm atomic vapor. Reportedly, the gurus have figured out how to “store complex images for up to 30 microseconds in rubidium vapor,” and if mastered, the process could help unlock secrets of “quantum information processing and even quantum communication.” If your interest meter just shot through the roof (you geek, you), head on down to the read link to slurp up more on how it’s being done.
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Posted in gas, 3d, science, text, light, writing, Physicists, Vapor | No Comments »
June 21st, 2008 by
Filed under: Cellphones, Digital Cameras, Displays
We’ve seen a couple handheld 3D devices, but Infosys just announced that developed a chipset capable of capturing and projecting 3D holograms from ordinary cellphones, and that it hopes to take the tech mainstream by 2010. The system captures a series of 2D images from normal cameras and uses them to develop 3D holograms, projecting received images using a laser projector and micro optical elements. Infosys also had a patent granted on the system required to transmit 3D data over normal telecom networks without clogging them up — the data is transmitted unprocessed, and the chipsets at either end do the heavy lifting. There’s no word on what devices this stuff might appear in, but we’re wondering what that laser system is supposed to project onto — or if we’ll have to take up smoking to get our 3D on.
[Thanks, Bucky]
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Posted in projector, 3d, hologram, holograms, infosys | No Comments »
June 20th, 2008 by
Filed under: Displays, Misc. Gadgets
Ariel Waldman contributes Movie Gadget Friday, where she highlights the lovable and lame gadgets from the world of cinema.
Last month on Movie Gadget Friday we reviewed the rough and rugged modified gadgets of the post-apocalyptic era in The Road Warrior. Shifting from stick shifts to spaceships, this week examines the pre-apocalyptic adventure of a team of astronauts tasked with re-igniting the sun by delivering a massive payload in Sunshine. Based in 2057, this near-futuristic film has heavy influence from 2001: A Space Odyssey and 2010: The Year We Make Contact. With relatively unexplained artificial gravity, inner-spaceship scooters and gold leaf heat-deflecting spacesuits, many of the gadgets and technology are taken for granted in this 2007 release.

3D Projection Cube
Structured as a small room on board Icarus II, the 3D projection deck serves as a way to boost astronauts’ spirits and calculate routes. Translucent walls with embedded light-emitting cells make up the entire cube of a room, allowing for an interactive 3-dimensional experience without the need for external projectors. It’s unseen yet as to if this experience requires the use of optical tracking cameras for a gestural user interface. Specific cells have the ability to toggle on or off depending on the specific need of the projection. While this gadget realistically blows away any CAVE we’ve seen (guesstimating these visuals to be upwards of 100 million pixels), the tactile-keyboard-loving-geek in us is still unrealistically holding out for a touchable hologram to toy with. More after the break.
Continue reading Movie Gadget Friday: Sunshine
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Posted in 3d, projection, movie gadget friday, MovieGadgetFriday, features, cave, Icarus II, IcarusIi, sunshine, vox, walkie talkie, WalkieTalkie | No Comments »
June 12th, 2008 by
Filed under: Displays
Bust out the Aqua Net and rucksak Ginsberg because 3D is once again the rage. Hyundai just announced its W220S TriDef 3D LCD which packs the standard list of specs we expected in a 22-inch monitor: 1,280 x 1050 WSXGA+ resolution, 1,000:1 contrast ratio, 300cd/m2 brightness and 5-ms response. Should you be bold enough to step into a pair of included polarized glasses then you’ll also be treated to a suite of bundled 3D-apps including Google Earth 3D, a pair of 3D games, and TriDef media player for 3D video content. The W220S launches in Japan tomorrow for ¥98,000 (about $913). Pics of the face-specs after the break.
Continue reading Hyundai’s W220S LCD: Google Earth, now in 3D!
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Posted in japan, 3d, Hyundai, tridef, w220s | No Comments »
June 11th, 2008 by
Filed under: Displays
We’ve pondered the potential for 3D display cubes for years now, but the gCubik looks to bring us a bit closer to a final concept. Measuring just 10 centimeters (about four inches), this diminutive display device visualizes objects in all three dimensions on the facets of a physical cube. Created by Japan’s National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT), the device could see uses in science, business, and, most importantly, videogames. The little guy will be shown next month in Tokyo and then in August at Siggraph 2008 in the US, with hopes of adding tighter resolution and real-world applications shortly thereafter.
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Posted in 3d, nict, cube, gcubik | No Comments »
June 6th, 2008 by
Filed under: Displays

Philips only just took the wraps off its 52-inch 3D display, but it looks like it’s not stopping there, as it’s now also showing off a new 22-inch model for those that prefer something a little more desk-friendly. This one boasts the same WOWvx “2D-plus-Depth” technology that its larger counterpart uses, but takes the resolution down to 1680 x 1050, and the contrast and brightness down to 1,000:1 and 300cd/m2, with a 5ms response time rounding out the basic specs. No word on the port situation just yet, nor is there any word of a price, but you can apparently look for this one to be available commercially sometime in the fourth quarter of this year.
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Posted in philips, 3d, WOWvx, 3d monitor, 3dMonitor | No Comments »
June 5th, 2008 by
Filed under: Displays, HDTV
It’s no nightmare — 3D is officially in style. Or it’s succeeding in fooling us, one or the other. Further proof that taking things to the third-dimension is all the rage has arrived courtesy of Philips, who has announced its intentions to reveal a 1080p 52-inch 3D display at InfoComm later this month. The unit will utilize the same WOWvx technology showcased a year prior in its 20-inch display, and will feature 700 cd/m2 brightness, a 2,000:1 contrast ratio and an 8-millisecond response time. The auto-stereoscopic display should be “commercially available from Q4 2008 onwards,” but we haven’t a clue how costly it’ll be when it eventually lands.
[Via SlashGear]
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Posted in philips, 3d, stereoscopic, digital signage, DigitalSignage, Infocomm, 3d hdtv, 3dHdtv, auto-stereoscopic, WOWvx | No Comments »
May 31st, 2008 by
Filed under: Displays, HDTV, Home Entertainment
Look out, naysayers — projectiondesign is giving this whole “3D revolution” thing some serious street cred with the F10 AS3D. Slated to debut at InfoComm 2008 in Las Vegas, the unit marks the company’s first active 3D stereoscopic projector. Notably, this isn’t the firm’s first foray into the third-dimension, as eight of its F20 sx+ PJs are currently being used in a 3D visualization system at Munich University. Moving on, we’ll also find its brand new three-chip DLP F80, which features a WUXGA (1,920 x 1,200) resolution, ACOP (Advanced Color Optical Processing) technology and a stratospheric price tag (we’re guessing on that last one). We’ll be holding out for pricing / release information, but we don’t suspect it’ll be too long before those critical points get divulged.
[Via AboutProjectors]
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Posted in projector, 3d, pj, stereoscopic, dlp, projectiondesign, hd projector, HdProjector, f80, d20, F10 AS3D, F10As3d, F20 sx, F20Sx, Infocomm, Infocomm 2008, Infocomm2008 | No Comments »
April 17th, 2008 by
Filed under: Displays
Zalman may be far from being a household name, but a stranger to 3D displays it isn’t. The company’s latest 22-incher not only packs a 1,680 x 1,050 resolution panel and a bundled set of glasses, but it features the ability to render graphics in 3D. The eager critics over at Trusted Reviews had a nice sit with the device, and when all was said and done, the ZM-M2020W was seen more as a building block for revision two than a runaway winner as it was. On the upside, it did manage to render some pretty phenomenal scenes in 3D — and even managed to change the reviewer’s perception of the technology — but the overly glossy screen and steep price tag kept it from being recommended without hesitation. Still, if you’re willing to pay the premium to fit into the niche, by all means, give the full review a once over in the read link below.
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Posted in review, lcd, monitor, reviewed, 3d, lcd monitor, LcdMonitor, Zalman, ZM-M2020W, ZM-M2020W Trimon, Zm-m2020wTrimon | No Comments »
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