Quote:
Originally Posted by Kal
The home implementation which I will guess be the most popular will use glasses that "blink" each eye so that each eye see's alternating frames on the tv.
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Just a bit more technical background.
To see 'flicker free' 3d will require sets that actually receive a picture at 120hz rather than the current crop of TV's that just interpolate 50 or 60 hz to 100hz and 200hz at the final display ( to give the illusion of fluid motion ).
True 120hz on the input is common with DLP projection TV sets and just entering the market for PC monitors. Very little available for LCD so far. It will be while before you will find TV's capable of flicker free 3d for polarization methods in your local JB HI FI
That being said there are already a number of 120hz notebooks on the market that will work with NVidea's 120hz LCD shutterglasses .
I have had LCD shutterglasses for PC gaming that work with my video projector but only at 60HZ so the 30hz flicker I see in 3d really is off- putting.
My choice for 3D viewing will be a 720p 120hz projector and Nvidea shutter glasses , both already available in the US at a total of about $800 USD. Why settle for a 40" screen when you can have a 120" one