What's the consensus around here? Is 3D taking off, going nowhere fast, or just plain dying on the vine? I was reading an article about past CES flops and 3D was mentioned.
I've read that glasses-free 3D is the same as passive, which cuts the vertical resolution in half. So it'd be only 1080p 3D. I'd rather get an active 4K or 8K or whatever and get 3D at the full resolution of whatever the resolution is. I wouldn't want any resolution degraded.My only hope is for glasses free 3D.
It's been tested but not ready for mainstream I guess.
I've got a UHDTV that does 3D.
Haven't even unpacked the glasses.
Don't plan to.
That's you. Active doesn't bother me at all.If I have to choose, I pick passive with lower resolution. Active glasses is an instant, long-lasting pounding headache for me, every time I have tried it.
I've read that glasses-free 3D is the same as passive, which cuts the vertical resolution in half. So it'd be only 1080p 3D. I'd rather get an active 4K or 8K or whatever and get 3D at the full resolution of whatever the resolution is. I wouldn't want any resolution degraded.
Krell said: Plus IMHO again, you need 4K to do adequate resolution 3D using passive glasses. (Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe passive halves the resolution of the set, hence the need for 4K.)
In a passive set the picture is displayed as 2 images overlapped 1080p x 1920 left and right eye. The film pattern retarder ( FPR ) on the screen surface will filter half the image in a line slicing pattern so that there are only 540 lines for the left and 540 for the right for each frame. But when you put on your polarized glasses the 3D image overlap fills in so that the image converges in your brain to a full 1080 x 1920. A 2D image will be missing the right eye so with polarized glasses the screen will have only one 540p image visible and a fine set of horizontal black lines becomes visible. Of course you wouldn't watch a 2D program with polar glasses would you? So the truth is, a passive TV still offers a full 1080p 3D vertical resolution. In effect, nothing is lost.
So it's OK to sum the 540 line resolution in each eye, as perceived by my brain, and call it 1080? By that reasoning, I should be able to claim that, because my brain blends 24fps into continuous motion, we should just call it "continuous" and be done with frame rate. And here I thought that TV specs were confined to the TV, and not my perception.
I now own two 3D capable Samsungs, one 1080P and one 4K. Each came with four pair of glasses. All still remain in their original wrapping in the box they came in. I doubt I will ever use them. I wonder how many more like me are out there? You cannot buy a higher end set without being 3D equipped.