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Crystalchild said:
snfr said:
Squilliam said:

3D glasses won't move beyond the enthusiast set. At least Nintendo has the opportunity to push 3D into the mainstream which is the important point. People don't like wearing glasses, and they don't understand them. I remember seeing a Panasonic 3D demonstration in a mall a week ago and people were walking away and complaining because the glasses had been turned off. Noone understood that they needed to press the button on the left underside of the glasses.

Yep, I agree with that. Nintendo are the ones to push new technology into the mainstream, Sony is simply not able to do that right now.

Anyway, it will be nice to see what the people will think when there are the first 3D TVs which don't require glasses.

i dont think theyll come in the near future. 3DS' 3D is possible because you look at it in a fixed Angle. Its build for one Person, 3D at Cinema's or TV is not, its build for diferent perspective's, if you watch a movie in a Cinema, you CANT place 100's of Person's in the Central Seat.

Well, 3D TVs which don't require glasses are already developed, but there are two problems. The first is, as you said, the viewing angle. The second is the price which I think is at 10 000€ minimum (I don't have a source right now, but I read it many times and saw a test of such a TV in a german TV programm). Price is not the problem after many years, but if the problem with the viewing angle can be solved is the real question.



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