Saturday, 17 March 2012

3D technology

Anyone who has watched Avatar in 3D cinema? Terrible is not it? Planet Pandora seemed to be really alive.

How fast the world's technological development. It looks like we have just begun to enter the high-definition television, Plasma, LCD, and LED. But now in 2010, the estimated high-definition television-tech 3-D, 3D, have started going there in the market.

Just imagine, if you watch a movie, or TV broadcast about the most beautiful beaches in the world, the white sand and clear blue water then you will almost like being there. Cool is not it? Or if you watch a movie like Avatar (James Cameron, 2009) for example, then you will like being on another planet.

And most exciting, if you watch sports, like football, Manchester United versus Everton, or watch the World Cup, you would like to watch directly in the stadium. And its star players, like you're competing in a room near you. It's really crazy!

3D TV technology is owned by the world's leading electronics manufacturers such as LG, Samsung, Sony, and Panasonic. Even the "3D ready" have also available in stores in the U.S., Japan, and Korea. 3D shows that had often seen a little dark, it can be solved long ago by LG, the new technology that has the brightness of the image (brightness) level.

Even in South Korea, television in there, with all-out support from the government and Korea's giant conglomerates (chaebol), it will begin running television programs in three dimensions only a few weeks away, early in 2010.

How 3D technology works? The trick is the film or show is produced by two or more cameras for a picture, which will be divided into the picture to the right eye and left eye. Later we will also wear special glasses (with blue glass and red), which will unify the image captured by the right eye and left eye. From there it will generate 3-D illusion of depth.

But the glasses to be produced will be more advanced than the cheap sunglasses that are now widely used in cinemas. While the technology without special glasses also have actually existed, but still very expensive and complex to be mass produced.

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