Wednesday 15 June 2011

3D TV MODEL

The Regza 20GL1 is a 20-inch flat-panel display with 1,280x720 resolution. The Regza 12GL1 is a 12-inch flat-panel display with 466x350 resolution. Toshiba unveiled the models to coincide with this week's Ceatec electronics show near Tokyo.
                                   
Toshiba said that its 3D technology, which is currently best-suited for small displays, provides "nine different perspectives of each single 2D frame." The company added that those perspectives are then "superimposed" by the viewer's brain "to create a three-dimensional impression of the image."

The 3D effect is available within a 40-degree area in front of the set, Toshiba said. According to the Associated Press, viewers must also sit two feet from the 12-inch LCD and three feet from the 20-inch LCD to view 3D content.

The new LCDs are "first step into the 3D future in the consumer home cinema market," Toshiba European marketing chief Sascha Lange said in a statement. "But it will take several years to develop larger 3D TVs without glasses with screen sizes of 40 inches and more at a yet reasonable price point."

The possibility of viewing 3D content sans glasses is something that many consumers will welcome, though.

Last month, a survey about 3D TVs showed that 30 percent of people don't like the need to wear special glasses to view 3D content.

Although Toshiba is trying to make its name in the glasses-free arena, the company is already a player in the 3D TV market. It currently sells the WX800 line of 3D TVs. Both the 46- and 55-inch models of the WX800 require glasses.

Toshiba's 20GL1 and 12GL1, which switch from 3D to 2D mode, are scheduled to be released in Japan later this year. They will retail for about $2,900 and $1,400, respectively. The company has not announced plans for availability outside of Japan.

Experiencing 3D on a television sans those horrifically unsightly glasses has been a dream for years, and while we heard that Mitsubishi had a few tricks up its sleeve last year, we're finally seeing the fruits of its labor. In a brief, completely monotonous video, the outfit demonstrates its "scalable system for real-time acquisition, transmission and autostereoscopic display of dynamic scenes," which translates to "3D TV" in layman's terms. We'll restrain from getting all up in the technicalities, but feel free to take a look at what the "future holds" in the video after the break.
I have always maintained that the biggest problem with 3DTV is the ridiculous glasses you have to wear. It does nothing for your street cred and although i can handle sitting in a darkened cinema. Having a visitor at home whilst i wear the silly specs is not a good look for me.
                 
The manufacturers appear to agree, and according to the Daily Yomiuri, Toshiba are producing a ‘glasses free’ – 3D technology for release by the end of the year. Although the way this will work is still unclear, it appears that Toshiba will use a technology known as autosterescopic 3D. This involves all kinds of technical terms such as parallax barrier, lenticular, volumetric, electro-holographic, and light field displays. But to the common man, it translates to each eye being shown different images by tracking where the viewers eyes are!

3DTV is having a hard time lately with director James Cameron advising viewers to hold off from buying a 3D set and internet connected tv becoming more popular than 3DTV. It is beleived that Toshiba are releasing 3 models before christmas from around the $1200 pricepoint. The new 3DTV’s could help with the current lacklustre sales of 3DTV which may be down to silly glasses or the fact that there is not much 3D content around. It is widely thought that 3D will not hit the mass market until the sets sell for less than $1000 anyway.
Incoming TV searches:
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Read more internet tv news: Toshiba Launching 3DTV Without The Silly Glasses http://www.worldtvpc.com/blog/toshiba-launching-3dtv-silly-glasses/#ixzz1Oh0OpiNG

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