Active 3d Vs. Passive 3d
#4
Posted 16 April 2011 - 04:18 PM
Speaking from my own limited experience: I too have seen the active and passive 3D sets and I have to says that (a) passive TVs DO NOT look interlaced, unless you sit too close to the screen, which is easily done with today's massive screen sizes;(
Passive technology however looks fantastic, to me it does anyway - I wear glasses anyway, so the shutter glasses as too heavy and the designers just don't think about glasses wearers when they make these things. It's strange actually as most cheap cinema glasses are just fine for wearing over standard glasses.
Anyway, the image on the passive LG set I saw was clean, sharp and detailed. It didn't have that weird fast action strobe effect you get on some 200Hz sets either, you know the effect I mean? When an object zooms past quickly and it leaves a trail of 'frozen' strobed after images behind it? Shutter glasses seems to cause this effect really badly on fact action, so Tron for example looks great on passive TVs but nasty and migraine inducing on shutter glasses.
I hope passive becomes the standard, and maybe one day we won't need the glasses at all. I've seen demos of 'no glasses' TVs too, but they are a long way from the living room yet. The viewing angle is just too critical to be of any use, unless you want to watch on your own and never move your head!
Patrick contradicts himself which is confusing: he says that once he’s noticed an artefact, in this case the alleged ‘interlace effect’ on the passive 3D TV he can’t ever ‘unsee' it. In the very next paragraph he says that once he's got used the effect it's not as noticeable! If you’re going to make out like you are ‘Mr Experience’ Patrick, at least be consistent and don’t make schoolboy errors like this.
Speaking from my own limited experience: I too have seen the active and passive 3D sets and I have to says that (a) passive TVs DO NOT look interlaced, unless you sit too close to the screen, which is easily done with today’s massive screen sizes;(
Passive technology however looks fantastic, to me it does anyway – I wear glasses anyway, so the shutter glasses as too heavy and the designers just don’t think about glasses wearers when they make these things. It’s strange actually as most cheap cinema glasses are just fine for wearing over standard glasses.
Anyway, the image on the passive LG set I saw was clean, sharp and detailed. It didn’t have that weird fast action strobe effect you get on some 200Hz sets either, you know the effect I mean? When an object zooms past quickly and it leaves a trail of ‘frozen’ strobed after images behind it? Shutter glasses seems to cause this effect really badly on fact action, so Tron for example looks great on passive TVs but nasty and migraine inducing on shutter glasses.
I hope passive becomes the standard, and maybe one day we won’t need the glasses at all. I’ve seen demos of ‘no glasses’ TVs too, but they are a long way from the living room yet. The viewing angle is just too critical to be of any use, unless you want to watch on your own and never move your head!
#5
Posted 20 April 2011 - 07:16 PM
#6
Posted 21 April 2011 - 09:40 AM
#7
Posted 22 April 2011 - 02:28 AM
#8
Posted 05 May 2011 - 10:06 AM
That seems to be one advantage of the active 3D sets since there's no real change to the display screen. If 3D dies just throw away the glasses and you still have a perfectly good 2D set.
#9
Posted 22 July 2011 - 01:16 AM
#11
Posted 25 July 2011 - 10:21 PM
FilipeRibeirol3vf, on 25 July 2011 - 07:25 PM, said:
The AMD 6000 series GPU properly supports HDMI 1.4spec. All current 3d technologies should work properly. Remember though two important factors.
1. The software must support it.
2. The drivers are not perfect. When I had my laptop with the 6630 in it, I found that often it worked as advertised, but occasionally, it wouldn't sync up correctly. Remember that this is still very new to the AMD cards, and to be patient.
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#12
Posted 30 July 2011 - 04:21 AM
#13
Posted 01 August 2011 - 12:18 PM
Yesterday I went to local frys electronics to see sharp 70 inch tv. But I liked the passive 3D of LG. Now I am strongly considering buying LG 65inch LCD or Plasma. If LG had 65 inch THX certified I would have bought it by now.
#14
Posted 04 September 2011 - 06:00 PM
you can get an LG LW5600 is a great smart 3D with lots of features and 4 free glasses for your family.
I had about the same experience as the reviewer, with Cinema 3D being the clear winner.
#15
Posted 09 September 2011 - 09:24 PM
This post has been edited by AaronFoust: 09 September 2011 - 09:41 PM
#16
Posted 09 September 2011 - 09:26 PM
This post has been edited by AaronFoust: 09 September 2011 - 09:40 PM
#17
Posted 09 September 2011 - 09:35 PM
-2D great on Passive
-Can use 3D RealD eyeware from Cinema on them; so no need to buy glasses
-More Depth inside & outside the screen
This post has been edited by AaronFoust: 09 September 2011 - 10:11 PM
#18
Posted 15 September 2011 - 12:52 AM
Now that there are fashion designer glasses like Calvin Klein, Gucci and Ingri:Dahl it should help out a lot, a lot of this was considered very "dorky" before
#20
Posted 14 October 2011 - 12:58 AM
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