D
Deleted member 13524
Guest
Yes, the brain joins left and right images together, those images have a horizontal perspective shift not a vertical one, so you get extra resolution horizontally, not vertically.
RealD cinema glasses use circular polarisation to block out sequentially displayed left/right eye images, this is not the same as a parallax barrier.
Of course it's not the same system as a parallax barrier, geez.. I was just saying the increased resolution "perception" is the same.
The RealD movies are also projected at half the resolution (compared to the standard digital projection ones), but the optics experts say the perception is the same as if it was a full resolution movie.
In the 3DS, the brain sees one 3.53" screen with a 5:3 aspect ratio and 192k pixels in it. Assuming an equal spacing between the pixels (the eyes could never distinguish those, nonetheless), do the math yourself and see how many columns and lines of pixels the brain will see.
I don't know how else I'm going to explain this, sorry.
I meant general opinion about the immersion in a movie using stereoscopic screens, from the cinema to hometheater setups.I'm not sure what "today's general opinion" on current autostereoscopic screens really is.
There's no general opinion on autostereoscopic screens because those screens are hardly available to the mass market right now.
Last edited by a moderator: