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    Friday, February 25th, 2011
    3:25 pm
    3D Eyeglasses - Just How Do They Function?
    With the current interest and improvement of 3D TV and movies, lots of people are commencing to grow more interested about the technological innovation powering it. This post will make clear how the glasses allow you to view in three dimensions. And, with one exception, you will not come across any technological vocabulary. So, continue reading to get a well-defined and easy-to-understand justification of how 3d glasses work.



    3D-TV glasses work by presenting marginally different visuals to the left and right eye. The technological innovation is referred to as alternate-frame sequencing. The images are not presented at the same time though. Rather, the left eye initially receives an image then the right eye, then the left again, etc.



    Any time a single eye obtains a graphic, the other is blocked by the 3d glasses. Even so, the blocked eye does not see due to the fact it happens too fast to notice. It is just like trying to see the wings of a humming bird. They move so quick, you cannot identify when they are up or down. This switching outcome works together to present slightly different versions of the very same image. The distinction matches the technique your eyes typically view things in the real world.



    Some people have pondered the reason why 3d glasses need electric batteries to be able to work. It used to be typical in earlier types of 3d movies that red and blue lenses were used to present a 3d impression. The previous sort of 3d glasses did not have to have electric batteries. The key reason why modern day 3d glasses have to have electric batteries is due to the more sophisticated technological innovation.



    To effectively render a 3d display without the red and blue colors, the eye glasses must be sequenced with the images presented on the television set. So, when the image for the left eye is shown, the glasses need to obstruct the right eye from seeing it. The same is true for the next image that is made to be seen by the other eye.



    To be able to be sure each eye sees the correct shot, the eye glasses receive a wireless transmission from the tv. It instructs the glasses when to filter one eye and open the other. Once again, it happens so rapidly that your eyes never discover they are being blocked to and fro. The reason the glasses have to have battery packs is due to the fact they power the very small wireless receiver inside the glasses. It really is the exact same reason your handheld remote control demands battery packs.



    Will there actually be a 3D-TV that does not have to have eye glasses? The solution to that question is a unquestionable, "Yes!" Designs are already on-going for 3D tv sets that need no glasses at all. Toshiba is one of the businesses ahead of the development. The technological innovation continues to be primitive and has several limitations about how distant you need to sit from the television. Even so, Toshiba is anticipating to begin offering properly functioning tvs by the year 2015.



    Therefore, for the present time, 3d glasses will be the standard for 3d television, but in the foreseeable future we can assume to have the ability to experience total 3d effects devoid of eyeglasses in our family room.



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