Archive for January, 2010

Photos from CES 2010

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

The Industry’s Biggest and Brightest go to Vegas

Sony's booth at CES 2010LG's booth at CES 2010

January 2010
Las Vegas, NV–

HTSA’s own David Berman was out and about at this year’s CES event and snapping some of the best booths at the show. Sony, LG, Panasonic and Microsoft are just a few of the many vendors that were in attendance. To see more pictures from the event, click here.


Will 3-D Make the Jump from Theater to Living Room?

Friday, January 22nd, 2010
Spotlight on 3-D: Specialized cameras will be required to provide content for 3-D televisions. Credit: ESPN

Spotlight on 3-D: Specialized cameras will be required to provide content for 3-D televisions. Credit: ESPN

Glasses-free 3-D television is still a long way from the market.

By Erica Naone

Television manufacturers and content producers started out the year pushing 3-D television hard, hoping to ride the wave of success enjoyed by the 3-D movie Avatar. Though glasses-free 3-D is still some ways away, manufacturers hope to entice consumers with a flurry of products that make the best of the difficulties with bringing 3-D content to the small screen.

Producing a 3-D television that doesn’t require glasses is “impractical for the foreseeable future,” says Peter Fannon, vice president of corporate and government affairs for Panasonic.

Demos featuring glasses-free 3-D television technology have yet to pan out into real products. Two years ago, Mitsubishi attracted attention by showing off glasses-free 3-D research technology, but the company has no products based on the work.

Fannon says that a key trouble with glasses-free 3-D is that it would significantly raise production costs. Most glasses-free TV displays use a lenticular lens, which gives off light at different angles–so that a different image reaches each eye. Such a display requires images of the same object to be captured from many different angles, forcing content producers to film and process the same scene from a dozen or more angles at a once. “That’s a production cost no one can bear,” he says. Lenticular lenses can also distort a picture, and viewers often have to watch from a specific angle.

Read the rest of the article at Technology Review


Photos from the Stereo Exchange / HTSA 3D Event

Monday, January 4th, 2010

Everybody attending the Stereo Exchange / HTSA event in New York City on December 18th experienced the next generation of 3D technology. See for yourself!