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IFA 2010: Sharp unveils 3D smartphone prototype with twin lenses

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Sharp's twin-lens 3D prototype camera isn't a smartphone, yet
By Thomas Ricker  posted Sep 7th 2010 4:15AM
Regardless of its ability to present a 3D image without glasses, we just weren't very impressed with Sharp's 10.6-inch display at the IFA show. That's not to say that its parallax barrier technology doesn't perform well at smaller sizes, like say, oh, the Ninentdo 3DS. In fact, Sharp's 3.8-inch switchable 3D (400 x 480) / 2D (800 x 480) display did a decent job of tricking our eyes into seeing a 3D image by exposing different pixels to each eye though tiny slits placed in front of a normal LCD. What we didn't see, though, was this smartphone-looking prototype (lacking radios, unfortunately) that combines that 3.8-inch parallax barrier panel with Sharp's twin-lens 3D camera module. So unlike some other 3D prototype cameras we've seen, Sharp's pup will present the 720p/30fps video in 3D immediately after taking the snap -- no special glasses required. Of course, with Sharp promising a 3D cameraphone before the end of the year, well, you've now got a pretty good idea how it will look. Backside, front, after the break.
source: engadget.com
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Copyright ©2010 HD Guru3D Inc. All rights reserved.
The content and photos within may not be distributed electronically or copied mechanically without specific written permission. The content within is based upon information provided to the editor, which is believed to be reliable. Data within is subject to change. HD GURU3D is not responsible for errors or omissions.

sharp-3d-camera-and-display-concept

Just last month, Sharp created much tech hype when they promised to deliver a glasses-free3D smartphone before the end of the year. And a prototype materialised this week at IFA, attracting the interest of many punters.

The smartphone (still under construction) combines the company's 3.8-inch parallax barrier panel with their twin-lens 3D camera module, meaning it can present 720p/30fps video in 3D in real time, or just after capturing, without the need for special glasses.

IFA 2010: the story so far

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IFA 2010 Wrap-Up
By Chris Davies on Sunday, Sep 5th 2010
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IFA 2010 isn’t quite finished yet – the show continues through until midway next week – but it’s had its stab at the major headlines. Would-be iPad “killers” and 3D were this year’s themes, with Panasonic, Sony, Sharp and others all trying to convince us that the 1080p HDTV we bought a couple of years ago should really be traded in for a new, 3D-capable set. Product of the show, though, has to be the Samsung Galaxy Tab, with the Korean company delivering a slate that we consistently heard people say was significantly more appealing than they expected.
With no shortage of Android tablets shown over the past six months (though a relatively small number actually making a commercial debut) it was easy to sideline the Galaxy Tab in the run-up to IFA as just another Froyo slate. If anything, though, Samsung has demonstrated that it’s not enough to slap Google’s fashionable OS onto some multitouch-capable hardware and call it a day; their third-party software message still needs to be fleshed out, but the company does at least have the research to justify the design, hardware and functionality decisions they’ve made. More than once we heard from iPad owners frustrated at being unable to make voice calls using the slate’s optional 3G connection, something backed up by Samsung’s numbers and offered on the Tab.
Samsung Galaxy Tab hands-on:
They’re not just dipping a toe, either, instead pushing ahead full-throttle with what Samsung told us will be a range of tablets. Variously sized, and with intra-segment differentiation for media consumers, creators and others, the Galaxy Tab’s broad launch this month and next will only be the start of a number of models to be released in 2011. This first may have taken them roughly twelve months of development from conception, but we’re guessing future examples will come thick and fast as they refine their design approach. Software aside, the biggest challenge is price: Samsung insists they’ve not finalised the numbers, and that any publicly mentioned prices right now are simply speculation, but the inevitability is that, if they’re to position the Galaxy Tab alongside their Galaxy S family smartphones (which retail unlocked for around $400) then it will undoubtedly command a significant premium over cheaper rival slates. Whether consumers are willing to stomach a data plan in return for a subsidised upfront price remains to be seen.
3D‘s future is, if not quite so niche as that of the Galaxy Tab, still with its fair share of doubters and confusion – both among consumers and industry alike. Billed as the next step in HDTV, most manufacturers had some degree of answers to questions over crosstalk, glasses technology and even health concerns of longer-term 3D viewing. They’re also supremely confident about 3D adoption: one company exec predicted 3D-capable sets would account for 40- to 50-percent of new sales within the next couple of years.
Nonetheless, there’s still plenty of confusion still to be addressed. 3D glasses standardisation, for instance, is on the table but nobody could give us a firm guesstimate as to when it might be decided upon: until then, consumers buying 3D HDTVs today (or indeed for what looks like the next twelve months at least) can’t necessarily expect to use the expensive shutter glasses from the first set with whatever they later upgrade to. The early-adopter premium is definitely evident, too; talk of practically weightless 3D glasses hitting the sub-$40 range was widespread, but right now they’re clunky, relatively heavy – especially if you already wear prescription glasses – and are around $150 a set.
The biggest drawback, though, is the lack of content, and that’s something the industry only has partial answers to. As they highlight, you need a tipping point of hardware adoption before media producers take notice in a significant way, but the 3D entertainment on offer right now is underwhelming in both quantity and, more concerning, quality. At keynote presentations for Sony, Panasonic and others – times when you’d expect the most convincing of demonstrations – the content felt formulaic. Philip Berne has written before about 3D film gimmicks such as characters or objects being flung out of the screen at the viewer, and these were in full effect this week.
Most footage had the staggered, layered quality of a cardboard theatre playset; ironically, some of the best video to avoid the effect came from Panasonic’s consumer-centric 3D camcorder (which pairs a 2D HD camcorder with a detachable 3D lens), though the 3D effect in that leaned heavily on the subtle side. Avatar was regularly highlighted as a best-of-breed example of what the 3D industry is capable of, generously skirting the huge investment in time and money the film demanded. Even sports, suggested by some as the “killer app” for 3D, was underwhelming in practice, with fast-moving balls blurrier and more difficult to track in 3D than they were in 2D.
According to the industry, would be 3D HDTV buyers will – when faced with a few hundred dollars premium over a regular 2D set – likely opt to “future proof their investment”, even if they don’t expect to make much use of the 3D functionality. “Try it and experience the content” is the message, though it skirts the fact that so far there’s not much content to try, and even less so if you limit yourself to 3D “done right”. Panasonic and ViewSonic both showed 3D capable camcorders, offering consumers the chance to bypass the entertainment industry and fuel their own content creation, but right now it feels more gimmick than anything else. Better technology was promised in the pipeline, but that’s unlikely to reassure anyone who’s picking up a new TV today.
If IFA 2010 had a third theme, it was competition with its most significant US counterpart, CES. On this 50th anniversary of IFA, the organisers were bullish about the scale and success of their expo in comparison to the perennial Las Vegas show. It’s an approach that courted criticism; IFA’s claims to floor space sold, exhibitors involved and visitors through the door were all widely argued, and we imagine CES will be preparing some glowing numbers of their own in response.
What’s interesting about IFA, though, is that it’s a press, trade and public event: an opportunity for the tech-curious to rub shoulders with journalists and bloggers as everybody hunts out the latest and greatest in not only HDTVs, laptops and tablets, but washing machines, irons and SodaStreams. It can make for a frustrating time when you’re trying to dash between tightly-scheduled keynotes, meetings and presentations, dodging groups clutching swag-bags of t-shirts, USB sticks and branded lanyards, but it’s also a barometer of what has public appeal among the shininess on offer.
3D held its fair share of attention, with plenty of people crowding the gaming stations, though while new technologies such as OLED – LG’s 31-incher stands out in particular – were eye-catching, it was clear that size still came before panel technology. The wedge-shaped groups in front of larger glasses-free 3D screens were telling indicators of their narrow sweet-spots and, more broadly, unsuitability for the average living room. Ereaders and netbooks – until relatively recently a tradeshow staple – had a minimal presence, overshadowed by numerous iPad rivals (such as the Toshiba Folio 100, ViewSonic ViewPad 7, Archos 70 and 101, E-Noa Interpad and Huawei Ideos S7), while Samsung’s expansive Galaxy Tab display was generally several people deep. We expected more iPad-compatible speaker docks, though, pretty much making do with Philips’ Fidelio.
We also thought we’d see more of Google TV, though several companies had rival systems, such as LG, Philips and Loewe’s collaboration on NetTV. Rumors of an LG Google TV set-top box announcement failed to pan out, and while 3D-capable Blu-ray players were common, there were also some high-profile content-on-demand announcements by Panasonic and others. The Apple TV launch, thousands of miles away in San Francisco, managed to overshadow much of the early IFA news, though the concept of streamed rather than physical media was the same.
There’s certainly more of a European flavour at IFA than you’d get at CES, though much of the truly attention-grabbing stuff is the same: big TVs and expensive home theatre kit. What’s interesting this year is that both key technologies from the show – 3D and tablets – feel on somewhat unsteady footing. 3D has the success of High Definition to follow, while tablets are yet to demonstrate whether the iPad is a segment opener or a sales aberration. As products from both niches filter out in force into the market over the next couple of quarters, it’ll be interesting to see whether consumer reception matches IFA booth hype.
source: slashgear.com
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Copyright ©2010 HD Guru3D Inc. All rights reserved.
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ifa-avatar

It seems that the topics of 3D and iPad-killer tablets have been echoing around the halls of IFA 2010, held in Berlin this year.

Sounds similar to CES, held in January in Las Vegas, but with a European twist. And a whole load of new products to peruse, of course.

World's best sounding 3D Blu-ray disc

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World's best sounding 3D Blu-ray
by Steve Guttenberg
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I've referred to the AIX Records "Audio Calibration Disc & HD Music Sampler" Blu-ray in a bunch of my CNET equipment reviews because it's loaded with terrific sounding Dolby TrueHD and DTS Master Audio music tracks. AIX refrains from using dynamic range compression, equalization or signal processing, so the sound is as close to being at the original session as can be.
Now, with the release of "Goldberg Variations Acoustica" AIX has ventured into producing original 3D video programming. The new Blu-ray was shot with four prototype Panasonic 3D A1 cameras, and the sound was recorded in 96 kHz/24-bit high-resolution audio.
This 3D Blu-ray boasts outstanding sound quality.
(Credit: AIX Records)
"Goldberg" maintains AIX's high standards for sound quality, but I'm an audio guy, so I called upon two of my video reviewer CNET colleagues, David Katzmaier and Matthew Moskovciak, to comment on the disc's 3D picture quality. They watched the Blu-ray on a Panasonic TC-P65VT25 display and were generally impressed. They liked the picture's depth, but expressed concerns about visible crosstalk, which can appear as doubled outlines around onscreen objects like the stand up bass' strings. Katzmaier and Moskovciak also felt the image wasn't as sharp as it could have been. The crosstalk artifacts varied from shot to shot, but Moskovciak still felt the "Goldberg" Blu-ray might be the best live action 3D picture he's seen *in a home theater setting* (the 3D image quality of "Avatar" in a movie theater was better).
Regarding the crosstalk, Katzmaier felt it wasn't the disc's fault, and the crosstalk might not show up on future generations of 3D TVs. "Goldberg" is fully compatible with standard 2D Blu-ray players and displays, so you can enjoy the disc even if you don't own a 3D set.
Sonically, "Goldberg" is a knockout and musically, it's a jazz interpretation of Bach's famous composition. Like most AIX titles the disc offers two surround mixes, "Audience," meaning the sound is from the audience's perspective, and "Stage," which puts you on stage among the musicians. It's nice to have the choice, though I much prefer the "Audience" perspective. In either case, Laurence Juber's acoustic guitar, Kevin Axt's bass, M.B. Gordy's drums, and Alberto Lopez' percussion all sound natural and three-dimensionally present. Once you get used to hearing AIX discs most standard commercially released recordings sound hopelessly flat and artificially processed. "Goldberg" is the best sounding Blu-ray I own.
The AIX calibration Blu-ray may help you extract better sound from your system.
(Credit: AIX Records)
Remember, great sounding gear can't make lousy sounding recordings sound any better than they really are. So before you upgrade your home theater buy a couple of AIX discs and see how good your system is right now.
I almost forgot to mention it, but the AIX Records "Audio Calibration Disc & HD Music Sampler" Blu-ray contains useful home theater setup tests such as the "Subwoofer Crossover Test" and "System Setup Tutorial" to help fine-tune your sound.
More AIX Records 3D Music Album titles are currently in production and will be released later this year.
source: news.cnet.com
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Copyright ©2010 HD Guru3D Inc. All rights reserved.
The content and photos within may not be distributed electronically or copied mechanically without specific written permission. The content within is based upon information provided to the editor, which is believed to be reliable. Data within is subject to change. HD GURU3D is not responsible for errors or omissions.

Goldberg_Variations_Acoustica_3D_Blu-ray_cover

Much of the emphasis on the quality of a home theatre 3D experience focuses on the video aspect, but it is the audio that helped films like Avatar and Toy Story 3 offer what they do.

Some companies are taking this into consideration and advancing the audio aspect of the technology further. Now, AIX Records has released a high-end 3D Blu-ray disc titled Goldberg Variations Acoustica, their first soiree into 3D video programming, raising the audio bar. But what does it really sound like?

IFA 2010: Toshiba announces more Regza 3D TVs

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Toshiba REGZA WL768 3D LED HDTVs
by Sze | Filed under HDTV
At the IFA 2010, Toshiba announced the new REGZA WL768 series 3D-capable LED HDTVs. The new WL series feature a “stunning exterior designed in collaboration with Danish designers JACOB JENSEN DESIGN – offering unrivalled style to complement advanced performance.”
Available in 40-inch, 46-inch and 55-inch screen sizes, the WL768 series boasts support for 3D content, Full HD 1920×1080 resolution with LED Edge backlighting, 7,000,000:1 dynamic contrastar ratio, and integrated DVB-T2 tuner. All models have built-in WiFi connectivity for access internet content with applications for BBC iPlayer and YouTube integrated as standard. There are four HDMI input and two USB input supporting MP3 and JPEG playback.
The REGZA WL768 uses the active shutter technology to maintain Full HD picture quality when switched to 3D mode and comes with a pair of compatible Toshiba 3D active shutter glasses, synchronizes with the TV’s refresh rate via an IR emitter, integrated within the TV chassis. This new 3D HDTV series also includes the MetaBrain processor, the Active Vision M200HD Pro picture processing with 200Hz refresh rate, 3D Resolution+ picture enhancement technology.
The new REGZA WL series will be released in October.
source: itechnews.net
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Copyright ©2010 HD Guru3D Inc. All rights reserved.
The content and photos within may not be distributed electronically or copied mechanically without specific written permission. The content within is based upon information provided to the editor, which is believed to be reliable. Data within is subject to change. HD GURU3D is not responsible for errors or omissions.

Toshiba-REGZA-WL768-3D

Although Toshiba revealed some new Regza models in July, the Japanese electronics manufacturer has announced even more 3D-capable LED HDTVs this week at IFA in Berlin.

The new WL768 Regza series are again design-focused and feature an exterior developed in collaboration with Danish designers Jacob Jensen Design.

IFA 2010: Philips unveils widescreen 3D display

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IFA 2010. Philips 3D Cinema Display 21:9
Date: 09/05/2010 12:02:00
Author: Jesús Maturana
Category: Audio and Video
Source: MuyComputer
Groups: Philips , LCD , Video
In January 2009 Philips introduced the first screen ultrapanorámica the world, Cinema Display 21:9. In full 3D boom more than a year and a half later, they have decided to update the model and shown at the IFA 2010 its new 3D 21:9 Cinema Display comes with a slightly larger and, as its name suggests, playback capability 3D content.
The new screen 21:9 Philips 3D Cinema Display is very scenic, is very broad and is intended to be used as a screen for viewing movies using this type of format.
The new screen has resolution 2560 x 1080p, with 3D support and a refresh rate of 400 Hz also has a slimmer frame and offers the feature Ambilight Spectra 3 that intelligently illuminates the back wall of the TV to match the image by offering a unique experience.
The display will arrive in Europe at a price of 4,000 euros and will be accompanied by two polarized glasses to view 3D content.
source: noticias3d.com
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Copyright ©2010 HD Guru3D Inc. All rights reserved.
The content and photos within may not be distributed electronically or copied mechanically without specific written permission. The content within is based upon information provided to the editor, which is believed to be reliable. Data within is subject to change. HD GURU3D is not responsible for errors or omissions.

phillips_3d_cinema_display

To try and stand out a little from the display manufacturing crowd, Philips is showing off an updated version of their high-end Cinema Display 21:9 from 2009 at IFA this week. 

The new 3D 21:9 Cinema Display is slightly larger this time round at 58 inches, sports 2560 x 1080p resolution and a refresh rate of 400Hz, and of course is now 3D capable.

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