Posts Tagged ‘3DGuy’
180 inch Plasma 3D TV from LG at IFA 2010
LG shows a broad range of exciting new 3D devices at the IFA 2010. The highlight at the LG booth is probably the 180-inch Plasma 3D TV prototype. Besides this monster 3D Plasma TV, LG also introduces a new 3D Plasma that we will actually be able to buy at the IFA 2010. The LG PX950N is LG’s first Plasma 3D TV and the first TV in the world to receive 3D THX Certification, the ultimate recognition for cinema-quality 3D on a TV. For a truly outstanding 3D picture, 600Hz Max Sub-field Driving ensures smooth viewing of even the fastest action sequences, while LG’s 3D Panel phases out light faster to produce images that are practically blur free.
What’s more, the LG PX950N Plasma TV’s self-illuminating pixels enable a wider viewing angle, meaning viewers can see complete, smooth 3D images wherever they choose to sit or even lie down in the living room. In addition, the PX950N supports the Multi Picture Format (MPF) function, enabling users to connect their 3D cameras
to the TV and view their 3D pictures directly on the big screen.
Along with the FULL LED models, the PX950N provides effortless, seamless connectivity through NetCast, DLNA certification and a wireless
AV link. With these functions, viewers will have access to a growing range of 3D movies and shows, whether they’re online or stored in home digital libraries.
LG also exhibits the brand new LEX8 and LEX9 3D TVs at the IFA 2010.
The IFA 2010 Consumer Electronics Show will take place in Berlin from September 3rd to September 8th. The IFA 2010 is celebrating the 50th edition and we will be reporting about all the new announcements. Stay tuned for tons of 3D TV related news.
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Wealth TV Scores a 3D FIRST with a Doc Walker Concert
WealthTV and CMT (Country Music Television) in conjunction with Corkscrew Media on July 20, 2010 recorded the first exclusive 3D concert of the country music award-winning artist, Doc Walker, in Kelowna, Canada.
IPAD and 3D ?? video demo here !
If this can be developed it will be… amazing.
Tonight seems to be the night for 3D. A design team released a proof of concept video showing how it’s possible to use an iPad to project a 3D image to the naked eye. It requires some special hardware, but it’s still pretty incredible. Check out the video below.
Currently, viewers can move around and view an image as if it was an object literally floating in space. Of course, right now it’s just a proof of concept, but if the team at Aircord Labs can pull it off, this has the chance to be an amazing bit of technology.
N-3D DEMO from aircord on Vimeo.
Source www.crunchgear.com
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Copyright ©2010 Al Caudullo All rights reserved. The content and photos within may not be distributed electronically or copied mechanically without specific written permission. The content within is based upon information provided to the editor, which is believed to be reliable. Data within is subject to change. Al Caudullo is not responsible for errors or omissions.
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LG notebook in 3D ?
Yes it appears true, that the mighty LG, also, is offering 3D…
Electronics makers are hurtling towards a 3D world – a place where all our devices will display images in three dimensions regardless of whether we are sitting at home in front of a TV, playing games on a portable game console or traveling across country with a laptop.
Hot on the heels of brands such as Asus, Lenovo, Sharp, Toshiba, and Samsung, LG Electronics has announced it will join the growing list of laptop manufacturers investing in 3D laptop technology. Its first entry into the 3D laptop market is a 3D-capable notebook computer called the LG R590 3D.
The LG R590 3D is equipped with a 15.6-inch screen, an Intel Core i7 processor, SRS Tru-Surround HD, and an optional Blu-ray drive. Included in the package is one pair of slim, lightweight polarized glasses.
LG will also add a 3D gaming monitor (the W63D) and its first dual-engine, single lens, full HD 3D projector (the CF3D) to its 2010 lineup of 3D products, said the company in a July 19 announcement.
The LG R590 3D has just been launched in Korea. The notebook us expected to become available globally in the weeks to follow.
No official price was announced but according to some reports the notebook will be priced under $1500.
As soon as we know more – you’ll know.
Original Sources: www.independent.co.uk www.techfever.net
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Copyright ©2010 Al Caudullo All rights reserved. The content and photos within may not be distributed electronically or copied mechanically without specific written permission. The content within is based upon information provided to the editor, which is believed to be reliable. Data within is subject to change. Al Caudullo is not responsible for errors or omissions.
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NTT Docomo’s 3D phone display demonstrated
If you want to look to the future, Japan is usually a good place to start. Example: 3D phone screens.
source: www.mobilecrunch.com
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Copyright ©2010 Al Caudullo All rights reserved. The content and photos within may not be distributed electronically or copied mechanically without specific written permission. The content within is based upon information provided to the editor, which is believed to be reliable. Data within is subject to change. Al Caudullo is not responsible for errors or omissions.
Triple the Trekkieness – New Star Trek Movie to be in 3D !
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Copyright ©2010 Al Caudullo All rights reserved. The content and photos within may not be distributed electronically or copied mechanically without specific written permission. The content within is based upon information provided to the editor, which is believed to be reliable. Data within is subject to change. Al Caudullo is not responsible for errors or omissions.
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Is 3D already proving to be cutting edge for surgeons ?
In a scene that showcases how some surgery of the future might be performed — and certainly taught — a high-definition TV screen in a University of Michigan operating room shows larger-than-life 3D images of Wendy Sarna’s brain.
Dr. B. Gregory Thompson Jr., Sarna’s neurosurgeon, carefully clips off a bulge, or aneurysm, in an artery at the back of Sarna’s skull. “The degree of detail is just so much greater in 3D,” Thompson says as images flash on a 46-inch TV screen.
Later, students will use 3D glasses to watch a video of the operation and examine tiny brain structures magnified about three times their normal size. U-M’s neurosurgery program is the first in Michigan with the 3D system, one of only 50 sites in the nation. The technology, now used in brain, spine and cataract procedures, promises to revolutionize the teaching of medicine. There also is a belief at TrueVision Systems Inc., the Santa Barbara, Calif., manufacturer of the system, and among some doctors, that the same technology Hollywood uses to make movies could improve surgical outcomes, too. The entire operation is captured by a 3D camera hooked up to a microscope Thompson is using in the surgery. A video of the procedure will be used for years to come to train University of Michigan neurosurgery students.
Elsewhere, some doctors using the 3D systems in ophthalmology, the biggest users of the technology, say that physicians trained to watch such lifelike movies may prove to be better surgeons someday because they will have a more intimate familiarity with the body’s vital structures.
“The learning curve will go through the roof,” said Dr. Robert Weinstock, a Tampa-area ophthalmologist who has been using 3D equipment in cataract procedures for several years. Weinstock’s Eye Institute of West Florida, uses the 3D technology in several ways, including patient education. Three or four times a year, in a room set up like a movie theater, senior citizens contemplating cataract surgery can watch a procedure with 3D glasses performed in an operating room upstairs at the center. “It eases their anxieties and fears,” Weinstock said. Some meetings are standing-room only.
Weinstock is such a believer that he regularly uses a big 3D screen to guide him in eye surgery. It lets him operate from a seated position, wearing 3D glasses looking at images magnified to three times their normal size. By sitting, rather than standing and bending to perform as many as 30 to 40 cataract procedures a day, “I do a better job,” he said.
TrueVision of Santa Barbara, Calif., the manufacturer of the 3D system, has federal approval to sell the system as a visualization tool for surgery. About 50 sites, mostly teaching hospitals, now use it for ophthalmology, spine and brain operations — procedures that require very precise surgical moves.
The company has filed for additional federal approval for new software that adds a guidance system for surgeons in cataract and astigmatism correction procedures. The software creates little dotted lines, or a template, that show a doctor precisely where to make a small incision by overlaying 3D images on top of previous tests. Weinstock is heading a study to test the software. In his practice, a common complication of cataract surgery dropped to .7%, from 1.6% that occurred when not using the system, he said. “In cataract surgery, if you cut too far forward you damage the cornea, and if you cut too deep you will rupture the capsule and lose the cataract in the back part of the eye,” Weinstock said. The complications occur in about 1 in 100 procedures, he said.
Other doctors are taking a wait-and-see approach. “It doesn’t make anyone’s surgery better, and it doesn’t provide anything we currently cannot do,” said Dr. George Williams, a nationally renowned ophthalmologist and chief of the department at Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak. Ocular microscopes surgeons now use have 3D technology built into them too, he said, though those systems can’t be used by more than two doctors at a time, if the microscope is fitted with two ocular systems. The 3D system “may have some benefits in teaching, but that remains to be proven,” Williams said. Dr. Kevin Foley, professor of neurosurgery at the University of Tennessee in Memphis, likes the fact that his entire OR team can watch the 3D screen. He uses the system to perform spinal surgery that sometimes requires the positioning of a patient on an operating table in such a way that the assistant is unable to peer through the surgical oculars.
source : www.freep.com
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Copyright ©2010 Al Caudullo All rights reserved. The content and photos within may not be distributed electronically or copied mechanically without specific written permission. The content within is based upon information provided to the editor, which is believed to be reliable. Data within is subject to change. Al Caudullo is not responsible for errors or omissions.
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Unreal : Samsung’s leviathan 65in C8000 gives big screen 3D thrills
source: hdtvorg.co.uk
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Copyright ©2010 Al Caudullo All rights reserved. The content and photos within may not be distributed electronically or copied mechanically without specific written permission. The content within is based upon information provided to the editor, which is believed to be reliable. Data within is subject to change. Al Caudullo is not responsible for errors or omissions
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