Consumer trepidation aside , probably the most other major issues standing in 3D’s way on its march into the mainstream is high production costs. 3D typically means two lenses, but one company, ISee3D, might have perfected a fashion using only one.
In theory, ISee3D’s technique is mind-numbingly simple in its execution. Consistent with them, one need only cover up one half of the camera lens, which shifts the point of interest, and then cover up the alternative side of the lens, shifting it again. Rapidly alternate between the two sides and voila, two images of an analogous subject from slightly different focal points and a 3D image. Sharp’s glasses-free 3D parallax screens , deployed inside the upcoming Nintendo 3DS, operate on an identical principle, due to their shifting images.
Of course, it is but one issue in a protracted list of issues presently plaguing 3D adoption. Shifting lenses aside, those glasses…they still just won’t do.
Bonus trivia: ISee3D cut its teeth inside the 3D camera space back within the 1990s, when it deployed a single lens 3D camera into the minimally invasive surgery space. [ ISEE3D via DVICE ]
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