MCCTV Security & Surveillance System Solution News From CCTUNG — 2d
What is the difference between active shutter glasses and passive polarized 3D glasses?
Posted by JiangDavid on

What is the difference between active shutter glasses and passive polarized 3D glasses? Active Shutter Glasses: This technology has been adopted by most consumer electronics firms like LG, Samsung, Panasonic, etc. With this technology, an HDTV will display one image to your left eye and one image to your right eye. Since the effective frame rate is halved, these HDTVs need to have double the refresh rate of HDTVs (60 Hz). This is why you will find that all 3D HDTVs have a minimum frame rate of 120 Hz (most have a frame rate around 240 Hz or even 480...
What is 4D?
Posted by JiangDavid on

What is 4D? The addition of special effects to a theatrical presentation to create a “fourth dimension” – the sensation of tactile experience: scent, temperature, touch. Examples:Beetles tickle the legs of unsuspecting cinema-goers, the wing beat of a gigantic dragon breezes through the rows of seats and spiders descend from the ceiling.
How can you get 3D from a 2D screen?
Posted by JiangDavid on

How can you get 3D from a 2D screen? A 3D TV or theater screen showing 3D content displays two separate images of the same scene simultaneously, one intended for the viewer’s right eye and one for the left eye. The two full-size images occupy the entire screen and appear intermixed with one another–objects in one image are often repeated or skewed slightly to the left (or right) of corresponding objects in the other–when viewed without the aid of special 3D glasses. When viewers don the glasses, they can perceive these two images as a single 3D image.
- 0 comment
- Tags: 2d, 3D, 3D glasses, 3D Printer, 3D products, 3D TV, 3DGlasses, Polarized 3D glasses