Microsoft Has New 3D Display That Works Without Glasses

Microsoft’s Applied Sciences group has just announced a new lens they’ve developed that allows you to watch 3D TV without bothering with those dorky glasses. This development will also lead to a reduction in the price of 3D HDTVs, which would further speed up their adoption.

The 2.5 million 3-D HDTV sets that are expected to land in homes this year might seem like a lot, but it’s really only a drop in the TV bucket. Early adopters will always exist, but this current wave of next-gen home-theater gear has more standing in its way than price. Who wants to wear those glasses? (Especially when most 3-D TV packages only come with two pairs, with extras running at least $50 a pop.) Doesn’t exactly make for the best 3-D World Cup viewing party, now does it?

We’ve seen small-scale glasses-free 3-D displays before, like the LCD screen on Fuji’s 3-D camera that use light directed at each eye individually to deliver a stereoscopic image. Microsoft’s display does a similar trick, but on a much larger scale. Their lens has a series of LEDs along the bottom edge of the screen that switch off and on rapidly and at varying angles to control where the light goes.

The screen can deliver a 3-D image to two different viewers’ eyes at once. In order to do so, its onboard computer has to track their eyes to target the light to each individual. In the past, such systems have been very bulky to account for air space needed between the lens and projector; Microsoft’s design, though, uses a lens that tapers from 11 millimeters thick at the top to six millimeters at the bottom. This taper means that the light can travel through the lens instead of thin air, Applied Sciences Group Director Steven Bathiche told Technology Review, meaning the entire setup can substantially shrink in size.

Light from the diodes enters the lens along the bottom and bounces through the lens until it reaches the proper viewing angle, at which point it escapes.

Though the setup currently only has a viewing angle of about 20 to 40 degrees, it’s still early in the development stages. One day the lens could oust the now-conventional backlight in LCD HDTVs to bring home a glasses-less screen.

Source: Popular Science.

This Post Has 4 Comments

  1. KPBird

    hello guys,

    check following site to know how 3d works

     http://www.quicknews4you.com/2011/05/19/how-does-3d-work-without-3d-glasses/

  2. Akira Hideo Harkonnen

    what is new about that ? i truly don’t understand … the guy who wrote this article definitely needs an update

  3. Steve-chanone

    Wow, coming from microsoft!! Who thoughts of it !!! Nice info on Projecteur 3D , Thank you by the way. But what’s the price of this??

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