3-D Televisions are coming out this week Vol. HDTV's =old technology LOL smh

Joined
Dec 27, 2002
Messages
1,630
Reaction score
72
[h1]Television Begins a Push Into the 3rd Dimension[/h1]
By BRIAN STELTER and BRAD STONE

Published: January 5, 2010

Ralph Kramden can finally buy a television.


January 6, 2010
spacer.gif
popup.jpg
spacer.gif
spacer.gif

[size=-2]Lionel Cironneau/Associated Press[/size]

[size=-1]The 3-D TV sets to be unveiled this week may start at $2,000.[/size]
spacer.gif
spacer.gif

spacer.gif


It was more than half a century ago, in a 1955 episode of "The Honeymooners," that Kramden, the parsimonious bus driver played by Jackie Gleason, told his wife, Alice, that he had not yet bought a new television because "I'm waiting for 3-D."

The wait will soon be over. A full-fledged 3-D television turf war is brewing in the United States, as manufacturers unveil sets capable of 3-D and cable programmers rush to create new channels for them.

Many people are skeptical that consumers will suddenly pull their LCD and plasma televisions off the wall. Beginning at around $2,000, the 3-D sets will, at first, cost more than even the current crop of high-end flat-screens, and buyers will need special glasses - techie goggles, really - to watch in 3-D.

But programmers and technology companies are betting that consumers are almost ready to fall in love with television in the third dimension. In part, it could be the "Avatar" effect: with 3-D films gaining traction at the box office - James Cameron's "Avatar" surpassed the staggering $1 billion mark last weekend - companies are now determined to bring an equivalent experience to the living room.

Anticipating this coming wave, ESPN said Tuesday that it would show World Cup soccer matches and N.B.A. games in 3-D on a new network starting in June, and Discovery, Imax and Sony said they would jointly create a 3-D entertainment channel next year. The satellite service DirecTV is expected to announce its own 3-D channels at the International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, where every major television manufacturer is planning to announce 3-D televisions and compatible Blu-ray DVD players on Wednesday.

"The stars are aligning to make 2010 the launch year of 3-D," said John Taylor, a vice president for LG Electronics USA. "It's still just in its infancy, but when there is a sufficient amount of content available - and lots of people are working on this - there will be a true tipping point for consumers."

At that point, the question becomes whether consumers - many of whom have only recently upgraded to costly new high-definition sets - will want to watch in three dimensions enough to pay for the privilege. "I think 90 percent of the males in this country would be dying to watch the Super Bowl and be immersed in it," said Riddhi Patel, an analyst at the research firm iSuppli.

But will the experience translate to other entertainment? Ms. Patel said, "You don't necessarily want the ladies of 'The View' sitting around you when you watch them."

For most consumers, 3-D is still far in the distance. With the announcement this week, the media companies are trying to place themselves at the forefront of an emerging technology, much as they did for HDTV a decade ago.

It took high-definition television about a decade to catch on - to the point where it has become part of the entertainment mainstream, with an adequate stock of HD programming and the sets now cheap enough to entice middle-class buyers. Analysts expect 3-D television to go through the same curve, initially attracting first adopters for whom price is little or no object and gradually moving out to other affluent and then middle-class homes as sets become cheaper and programmers create enough 3-D fare.

Or, of course, the technology could be a total flop.

For decades 3-D was a gimmick for B-movies and occasionally on television (in bad quality with flimsy paper glasses), but newer technology has largely erased those memories. Peter M. Fannon, a vice president at Panasonic, called the new sets "totally different than what one had seen over the last 20 to 30 years."

In 3-D, television makers see an opportunity to persuade households that have already bought HDTVs to return to the electronics store. Though television sales jumped 17 percent in 2009, the industry needs new innovations to keep the cash register ringing.

"Three-D is an effort by the industry to come up with something that will motivate consumers to trade up," said Van Baker, an analyst at Gartner Research.

Jeffrey Katzenberg, chief of Dreamworks Animation, said producers were preparing "an enormous surge in 3-D content, with images that are truly beautiful on these new monitors."

Leading the charge to television, the pioneering sports network ESPN said it would show at least 85 live events on a 3-D channel starting in June. "The sports genre is probably the best suited to exploit this technology," said Sean Bratches, an executive vice president at ESPN. The company has held preliminary talks with Comcast and other operators about gaining distribution; the 3-D channel could come at an added cost to subscribers. It will go dark when not showing live events.

The joint venture among Discovery Communications, Sony Pictures Entertainment and the Imax Corporation will be a full-time channel featuring natural history, movies, sports, music and other programming.

New 3-D televisions, like the 3-D screens in theaters, work by dividing picture images into two sets, one for each eye. A viewer must wear special glasses, so each eye captures a different image, creating the illusion of depth. Filming entails two connected cameras, one for the left-eye image and the other for the right.

Manufacturers have developed two technologies for 3-D glasses in the home. In so-called polarized glasses, which can cost under a dollar, each lens blocks a set of images transmitted in certain types of light. "Active" glasses, which are better suited for LCD screens in particular, have battery-powered shutters that open and close rapidly, so each eye sees different views of each frame. These glasses can cost up to $100, but television makers are expected to package at least two pairs with each monitor.

On the horizon is technology that allows people to watch 3-D without glasses, but that has severe limitations, like forcing viewers to sit at a certain distance.

Mike Vorhaus, the managing director of new media for Frank N. Magid Associates, a media consulting firm, said 3-D was many years away from widespread adoption. For now, he said, it is "one more appetizer" for consumers who "already have a lot to digest."

Indeed, a number of hurdles remain, including a lack of production equipment and dueling 3-D transmission standards. But backers like David Zaslav, the chief executive of Discovery Communications, say 3-D is bound to gain attention because consumers and producers are always striving for what looks "closest to real life."
 
Don't see the appeal of this.

It's infiltrating videogames as well.
 
hopefully one of my friends will get this so I can watch it...I don't care much to shell out that much for it myself though
 
one of my professors talked about this. he said that it'll be better than movie theater's.
and he also talked about TVs that show different pictures at different point of views. like say you and you're buddy is playing Halo on the same screenwell instead of just having the top part, you'd have the whole screen while he has the whole screen too. so no more screen watching......i forgot how hesaid it was possible
 
I hate that 3D crap. You can't just flip between channels and everyone has to wear the glasses or the picture just looks awful and you can't take theglasses on or off without letting your eyes readjust every time.
 
Mitsubishi has been working on this for a while they eve have one that projects in 3D
 
Originally Posted by Nawth21

I hate that 3D crap. You can't just flip between channels and everyone has to wear the glasses or the picture just looks awful and you can't take the glasses on or off without letting your eyes readjust every time.
Well, since we're used to seeing things in 3d, as we would use the glasses more, I'm sure it'd make adjusting easier.

What would be REALLY dope is if they could develop 3d without the use of glasses.
 
i'd love it for video games and some special effects movies. not so much for Stuart Scotts eye.


Edit BTW if they coming out with this i might have well passed on the LCD's damnit
mad.gif
 
Wait....I just imagined watching porn in 3-D....this might be good after all.
 
Eh, I'll wait 'til it's more "developed", even then I don't know if I'll be interested...
 
ill pass on those damn glasses i hate those !!! ill settle for and HDTV LED 120 -240 hz perferrablely 52"
grin.gif
 
don't worry about your HDTVs you've already bought, by the time we're ready to afford this 3D stuff, we'd all be wanting a new TV anyways......give it about 7-10 years to become common place
 
yeap i'm waiting till mid-year more or less to get at my boy for the discount....when Sony launches the firmware update enabling 3D natively from thePS3...ESPN 3D on the way too....i see myself not leaving my house after that purchase
 
this will be in full force in about 3-5 years. it'll be hard to resist buying one now for that world cup game, but the $ spent now for the technologywon't be worth it.

750$ for a 480p 17 "HDTV back when the technology was new(5 years ago)
NOW
750$ for a 46" Samsung 1080p
 
the glasses aren't a big deal to me....especially since I usually don't spend a lot of time in front of the TV anyway.
 
3d gives me a headache. Plus I already wear glasses, so I'm definitely not wearing some stupid 3d glasses.
 
Back
Top Bottom