MCCTV Security & Surveillance System Solution News From CCTUNG — 3D glasses
Why is it called "3D"?
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Why is it called "3D"? The name “3D” is a short-hand abbreviation for “three-dimensional,” meaning that an image or object exists (or appears to exist) on three axes — X, Y and Z. If you think of a piece of graph paper, the X axis runs horizontal across the page and the Y axis runs vertically. This makes up the basics of a two-dimensional (or 2D) image. If you were to put a pencil the center of that piece of the graph paper, the pencil would become the Z axis. You would then have enough axes to create a three...
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- Tags: 3D, 3D glasses, 3D home theatre, 3D Printer, 3D products, 3D TV
How can you get 3D from a 2D screen?
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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.
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- Tags: 2d, 3D, 3D glasses, 3D Printer, 3D products, 3D TV, 3DGlasses, Polarized 3D glasses
How is 3D TV different from 3D in the theater?
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How is 3D TV different from 3D in the theater? Many viewers have experienced newer 3D presentations, such as IMAX 3D, in movie theaters. Though the technologies differ somewhat–most theaters use passive polarized 3D glasses, for example–the main practical difference between 3D TV in the home and theatrical 3D is the size of the screen. In the home, the image is generally much smaller, occupying a lower percentage of viewers’ fields of vision. Among TV makers we asked, only Panasonic recommend a closer seating distance (of 3x the screen height away–about 6.2 feet from a 50-inch screen) for a better...
How do Linear Polarized 3D glasses work?
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How do Linear Polarized 3D glasses work? To present a stereoscopic motion picture, two images are projected superimposed onto the same screen through orthogonal polarizing filters. It is best to use a silver screen so that polarization is preserved. The projectors can receive their outputs from a computer with a dual-head graphics card. The viewer wears 3D glasses which also contain a pair of orthogonal polarizing filters. As each filter only passes light which is similarly polarized and blocks the orthogonally polarized light, each eye only sees one of the images, and the effect is achieved. Linearly polarized glasses require...
Why do I need to wear special glasses to view 3D?
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Why do I need to wear special glasses to view 3D? The reason you need to wear glasses to watch 3D is that a separate image needs to be sent to each eye, with the brain combining the two images into a single image with 3D characteristics. In other words, the 3D process actually fools your brain into thinking it is seeing a 3D image, so it creates one for you.