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3D TECHNOLOGY

Submitted By :Swati rana


Section: M6901
CONTENTS
 Introduction

 History

 Processing behind a 3d view???

 3D:- unique image to each eye?

 Benefits of the technology

 Challenges

 Future of 3D

 Conclusion
INTRODUCTION
 3d is the abbreviation use for 3 dimensional.
 It is a technology by which we can see a recorded image
or movie in the same way as we see the object in real
world.
 3d is based on a simple principal - stereoscopy.

 Being able to see in 3D means that your vision has a


sense of depth, of how far objects are from your eyes.
 Your brain automatically calculates this for you by
combining the images it gets from your left and right
eyes.
HISTORY
 In 1855 the
Kinematascope, a stereo
animation camera, was
invented. It was able to
record 3d motion
pictures.
CONTD…
 In 1915 the first anaglyph
movie was produced.
 In 1922 the first public
3D movie, "The Power of
Love", was displayed. In
1935 the first 3D Colour
movie was produced. The
use of the technology
would remain dormant for
over a decade.
 In the 1950s, 3D technology
made a come back.
 In the 1960s a new
technology called Space-
Vision 3D was released.
 In 1970, Allan Silliphant and
Chris Condon developed
Stereovision. This was a new
3D technology that put two
images squeezed together
side by side on a single strip
of 35 mm film.
PROCESSING BEHIND A 3D VIEW.
HOW CAN WE DELIVER A UNIQUE
IMAGE TO EACH EYE?
PASSIVE POLARIZED GLASSES:
 We have two images at
the TV side of things, and
each one can be
polarized in a different
direction. We then add
the same filter to a pair
of lightweight glasses,
and each eye will only
see the light that is
polarized in one
particular direction.
ACTIVE LCD SHUTTER GLASSES:
 The viewer must wear some pretty bulky glasses - each
eye has a separate LCD screen inside it, as well as an
infrared signal receiver that connects it to the movie
being played.
 active shutter methods display one frame after the other,
alternating between the views destined for the left and
right eyes.
 The LCDs in the glasses then turn on and off in sync,
blocking one eye out then the other. This flashes on and
off so fast that your brain simply combines the two
images and forgets the other 50% part where each eye
couldn't see anything.
REALID CIRCULAR POLARIZED FILTER IN FRONT OF
A PROJECTOR
BENEFITS OF 3D

 Three-dimensional (3D) imaging applies the knowledge


that humans see things with two eyes that are set slightly
apart, to reproduce a sense of depth in addition to
horizontal and vertical information
 you get a more realistic image.

 There are many applications for this effect. 3D has also


been long used by professionals for applications where
information can most usefully be analyzed or
manipulated in three dimensions.
 helpful to a car designer
 Semiconductor industry

 Educational content
CHALLENGES IN ADOPTION

 The challenge that any technology faces is acceptability

 dorky image of 3D glasses.


FUTURE OF 3D TECH IN INDIA

 Every major manufacturer has revealed its 3D plans for


2010

 3D cameras for filmmakers will arrive in the fall.

 Film content is already available and will be growing

 Ideally, we'd be able to view 3D displays with no glasses


at all, and that's what manufacturers are working on.
CONCLUSION

 3D is coming and just like HD before it.


 The problem right now is very few have had the chance
to check out the technology and if you have been lucky
enough to see it, it is hard to convey how cool it is to
others.
 stupid looking glasses :which doesn't make that much
sense since you'll be wearing them in the privacy of your
own home.
 tell your friends and family that something new is
coming, and no it isn't like anything else they've seen.
THANK YOU

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