Re: The Official non-auto Image thread Quote:
Originally Posted by groom you are wrong, depth is obviously visible, in every picture the depth is visible.
This is how the glassless 3D will look like. The depth can be very easily spotted in the many pictures, you can clearly see the bell hanging in air,
if the same picture is taken in 2D you will see it flat,
next time i will post 3D gif, may be your can see it much better. |
No offense meant but sorry to say you are wrong.
Depth here is perceivable since we can see the bokeh and we can very well understand the subjects and the angle at which the shots are taken.
Again, this is NOT glassless 3D. These pictures, viewed in in normal monitors will NEVER give you 3D effect.
For real 3D viewing, two cameras have to shoot at eye's distance from each other (or like you did, two shots taken by spacing apart the camera a little) and then two of those images has to be brought separately to both our eyes. This means, the left eye has to see what the left camera shot and the right has to see what the right camera shot. Traditionally this is achieved by wearing polarizing filters which can cut out right camera's frame on your left eye and left camera's frame on your right eye, making both your eyes see different frames - then it is the job of our brain to see it in 3D.
Coming to glassless 3D - like in HTC Evo 3D phone - again both eyes will be seeing different images - that is achieved by angular filtering of what goes out from the screen. If you keep the phone at a certain distance from your eyes, both of your eyes will be seeing different frames, and of course the display will be actually displaying both the frames for that. You can check this by tilting the display to an extreme angle with respect to your eye - you can then see alternating left and right frames, obviously without the 3D effect.
In other words, the special glass in front of the screen can deliver different pictures to different locations onto the viewing space in front of the display. you have to keep your two eyes in two different "delivery zones" (They will be at two different delivery zones anyway, with respect to the screen) of that special glass.
My colleague sitting next has an HTC Evo 3D - so I have experienced glassless 3D in it.
Bottom line is, a normal computer monitor cannot give you real 3D experience. But it can give you only Anaglyph 3D effect if you wear read and cyan glasses.
Last edited by clevermax : 13th September 2012 at 10:51.
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