If it were Acer alone, despite being a major hardware player, it would be easy to dismiss this as an experiment, but with ASUS joining the club with its creator-focused ProArt Studiobook 16 3D OLED laptop, this technology seems to be ready for end users.
Glasses-free 3D displays work by using a technique called “parallax barrier” or “lenticular printing” to display a different image to each eye, creating the illusion of depth. The display contains a series of vertical slits or lenses that allow each eye to see a slightly different image, creating the illusion of 3D. These new glasses-free 3D displays also use eye-tracking technology to adjust the image displayed to each eye in real-time, ensuring that the 3D effect is maintained as the viewer’s head moves.
Well, I, for one, never gave up on 3D technology. I still have a 3D TV and will still buy the 3D Version of any movie over the 2D option. I just hope that the monitors will be an open standard for content creation, so you are not locked into just what Acer or ASUS license.
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Are 3D Monitors Making a Comeback?#
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3Dmonitor At one point many years ago, it seemed like home 3D TVs and monitors were the future. Before the rebirth of VR, this was how we’d get more immersive media. Then, 3D seemed to die outside movie theaters—but next-generation 3D displays are here, and they don’t need glasses.