After the rush to upgrade to HDTV, 3D was supposed to be the next big thing. Propelled by the enthusiasm for a few well-crafted media properties like the blockbuster movie Avatar, initial expectations ...
3D TV is dead. Buried. Done. Or so it seemed. Though 3D TV technology was assumed to be a dream of the past, researchers think they can revive the technology with a new glasses-free algorithm-based 3D ...
I remember when my dad would occasionally dig his old Laserdisc player out of storage so we could watch the original Star Wars trilogy digitally. He wouldn't bother with it often, but until Lucasfilm ...
As stakeholders examine this latest turn of events, plans are already in place to launch glasses-free sets this holiday season. By Adrian Pennington, Carolyn Giardina When ESPN officially announced on ...
It's no secret that 3D TVs have long faded from the cultural zeitgeist. Not only are 3D TVs rarely ever produced these days but even at-home 3D content is few and far between. The technology was ...
The flatscreen HDTVs at the Consumer Electronics Show were absolutely dazzling. Color, contrast and clarity are better all the time. OLED displays are the brightest and thinnest yet. And of course, ...
As you may or may not know, this year every TV manufacturer has decided to abandon 3 unless plans change, no TV manufactured from 2017 onwards will ever support 3D again. This is obviously sad news ...
The breakout hit of the Consumer Electronics Show in 2010 was a television set. Hard to believe now, maybe, but it’s true; for one shining moment, the Toshiba Cell TV was the most exciting new thing ...
At least for the moment, it’s hard to even call 3D TV a fad. For that implies, a critical mass of consumers opted to give it a whirl before either they lost interest or hardly anyone followed them in ...
Consumers will likely see 3D LCD TVs that don’t require people to wear polarized glasses out on global markets by 2015, according to a Taiwanese research group that ...
Sony Corp. will launch 3D televisions in June, entering an increasingly crowded market that is betting the revolutionary TV will become the next hot product in the electronics industry. By Kiyoshi ...
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