Yeah, thanks for taking me so literally. My point was to correct a previous poster by pointing out that 3D was already mainstream by makers.Dare challenged to find a model that didn't include 3D, I pointed one out to him.
Yeah, thanks for taking me so literally. My point was to correct a previous poster by pointing out that 3D was already mainstream by makers.Dare challenged to find a model that didn't include 3D, I pointed one out to him.
But, if car owners constantly and consistently posted anti-Sirius threads every time somebody mentioned a desire to have Sirius included in more cars, it would be just as annoying as the anti-3D trolls. (Yes, I realize some posts like Dare's and Bobby's are not trolling. But, many others are.)Just because one of our cars is Sirius "ready" does not mean we use the service...we don't.
And some will be Googling "3D is alive" with their fingers crossed hoping for positive stories !
The reason I said Google 3D is dead is because I just read an article about it. I get so many e-mails that give me headlines on mostly electronic sources. So I has to find where I had read this and it was from 2 sources, Forbes and I think it was PCWorld.
For the record , I am not against 3D, I was very interested on how much news came out of CES 2013. And from what I saw there was none on any of the many sources I checked for 3D. It was all 4K and OLED that caught everyone's fancy. I still believe you will see 3D just built into the majority of TV's. The industry will just have to win the public back with passive 3D.
While I do not normally favor government intervention into the marketplace, I'd like to see the federal government begin to provide satellite 3D service for select channels such as Discovery, History, Nickelodeon, NickJr, the Military Channel, PBS etc. This could be done for distribution on Dish, DirectTV, and the big Cable companies such as Comcast as a public service. The gov could pay for "3D-ing" the content and also for the bandwidth used for the 3D channels.
Where, in China ?If a rationale is needed, this could be considered 'pump-priming" to jump start the 3D industry and create more jobs.
I agree with the poster's comment that 3D is being built in to most manufacturer's product lines, if that is what he is saying. Looking at the TV ads in today's paper I saw Sony, Samsung, LG and Sharp all with 3D models; I didn't pay attention to Panasonic but assume that is the same. At the same time, I noted that the non 3D models are quite a bit cheaper. If the non-3D models are made using a common chip with the 3D models, why the big price differential?
In addition, I agree that passive view will be the way to go; most people won't want to pay $100 for an active shutter pair of glasses so long as there is almost zero content available. While I do not normally favor government intervention into the marketplace, I'd like to see the federal government begin to provide satellite 3D service for select channels such as Discovery, History, Nickelodeon, NickJr, the Military Channel, PBS etc. This could be done for distribution on Dish, DirectTV, and the big Cable companies such as Comcast as a public service. The gov could pay for "3D-ing" the content and also for the bandwidth used for the 3D channels. If a rationale is needed, this could be considered 'pump-priming" to jump start the 3D industry and create more jobs. I hope Prez Obama reads this and jumps at the opportunity this idea provides for creative economic advancement.
If the above were to happen, I would immediately become a consumer with a new 3D HDTV sittilng in my living room or bedroom.
Best regards,
Fitzie
Not directly. It can just as easily be applied to joint standards.Patent law is what prevents most collaboration/standardization in the first place.
My friends here in the conservative flatlands of Virginia would accuse me of being a real bleeding heart; tax-n-spend liberal. Even I find this thought horrifying. Why on earth would I want the Federal government spending my tax dollars to support this kind of nonsense? This is certainly a case where the marketplace has all it needs to sort out what is viable and what is not.
I agree with the poster's comment that 3D is being built in to most manufacturer's product lines, if that is what he is saying. Looking at the TV ads in today's paper I saw Sony, Samsung, LG and Sharp all with 3D models; I didn't pay attention to Panasonic but assume that is the same. At the same time, I noted that the non 3D models are quite a bit cheaper. If the non-3D models are made using a common chip with the 3D models, why the big price differential?
In addition, I agree that passive view will be the way to go; most people won't want to pay $100 for an active shutter pair of glasses so long as there is almost zero content available. While I do not normally favor government intervention into the marketplace, I'd like to see the federal government begin to provide satellite 3D service for select channels such as Discovery, History, Nickelodeon, NickJr, the Military Channel, PBS etc. This could be done for distribution on Dish, DirectTV, and the big Cable companies such as Comcast as a public service. The gov could pay for "3D-ing" the content and also for the bandwidth used for the 3D channels. If a rationale is needed, this could be considered 'pump-priming" to jump start the 3D industry and create more jobs. I hope Prez Obama reads this and jumps at the opportunity this idea provides for creative economic advancement.
If the above were to happen, I would immediately become a consumer with a new 3D HDTV sittilng in my living room or bedroom.
Best regards,
Fitzie
I.. umm..it's...well...never mind.Dish does not want nothing too do with 3D.
The 3D proponents wish he was right !!I.. umm..it's...well...never mind.