Facebook english version. မိမိဖုန္းထဲကို gpkဖိုင္ေလး install လုပ္ျပီးပါျပိီ။ gpk ဖုိင္မ်ားကို ေဒါင္းလုပ္ လုပ္လုိပါက သို.၀င္ေရာက္ေဒါင္းနုိင္ပါတယ္။ Install From Android Device ေနာက္တနည္းကေတာ. ကလစ္နွစ္ခ်က္ေခါက္လုိက္ပါ။ ကဲဒါဆုိရင္ေတာ.
Glasses-free 3DTV - broadcasters show support by David Mercer DAVID MERCER, from Strategy Analytics, took an hour away from the Connected TV Summit last week to stop by at the Screen Media Expo at London’s Earls Court. While it’s not a consumer event he was interested to see what was claimed to be the latest in autostereo 3D from a Hungarian technology developer, iPont. IPont has recently established its UK office in Oxford, and is going to be in the news this weekend as it is supplying the technology behind the first public broadcast of an auto-stereo 3D football match.
Feb 29, 2012 - In an crack to acquire your medical supplies costs easier to. Digital blue usb microscope drivers. She suggests that you lie back on the sofa and she crawls over, straddling. REV’IT Akira Air Jacket. The REVIT Akira Air Jacket sports MotoGP styling in a fully perforated leather jacket. Dual-comp protectors and CE-level 2 rated Seeflex protectors come standard at shoulders and elbows, with the option to upgrade with the CE-level 2 rated.
Sky will be transmitting the European Champions League final in 3D, and most home- and pub-based viewers will need to wear 3D glasses. Sky’s 3D productions and broadcasts are tailored specifically to the needs of glasses-based technologies, but iPont’s technology converts the standard live Sky 3D broadcast for viewing on autostereo displays, and this will be demonstrated to an invited audience at the Walkabout pub in Covent Garden, London on Saturday evening.
IPont gave several demonstrations at Screen Media Expo, including 3D Blu-ray and football matches, though none of the latter were broadcast live. They were using autostereo displays from Tridelity and Alioscopy.
As with all 3D content, the production quality of the material varied, but in general the 3D effect was impressive, at least relative to most other autostereo demonstrations I have seen. IPont claims that its current technology supports nine viewing angles, but I did not notice as strong a deterioration in viewing experience between viewing points as with some other technologies, such as Toshiba’s autostereo TVs. IPont’s “secret sauce” is a box of software tricks which converts stereo 3D, on the fly, to multi-angle autostereo 3D. Autostereo displays rely on the availability of multiple angles in the video content which generate multiple viewing angles from the display. The (extremely) expensive way to do this is to set up multiple camera positions during content production, but this is always likely to prove cost-prohibitive. IPont’s current technology works at the consumer or viewer end, and could be included in 3DTVs themselves (iPont is in discussion with leading TV manufacturers).
Facebook english version. မိမိဖုန္းထဲကို gpkဖိုင္ေလး install လုပ္ျပီးပါျပိီ။ gpk ဖုိင္မ်ားကို ေဒါင္းလုပ္ လုပ္လုိပါက သို.၀င္ေရာက္ေဒါင္းနုိင္ပါတယ္။ Install From Android Device ေနာက္တနည္းကေတာ. ကလစ္နွစ္ခ်က္ေခါက္လုိက္ပါ။ ကဲဒါဆုိရင္ေတာ.
Glasses-free 3DTV - broadcasters show support by David Mercer DAVID MERCER, from Strategy Analytics, took an hour away from the Connected TV Summit last week to stop by at the Screen Media Expo at London’s Earls Court. While it’s not a consumer event he was interested to see what was claimed to be the latest in autostereo 3D from a Hungarian technology developer, iPont. IPont has recently established its UK office in Oxford, and is going to be in the news this weekend as it is supplying the technology behind the first public broadcast of an auto-stereo 3D football match.
Feb 29, 2012 - In an crack to acquire your medical supplies costs easier to. Digital blue usb microscope drivers. She suggests that you lie back on the sofa and she crawls over, straddling. REV’IT Akira Air Jacket. The REVIT Akira Air Jacket sports MotoGP styling in a fully perforated leather jacket. Dual-comp protectors and CE-level 2 rated Seeflex protectors come standard at shoulders and elbows, with the option to upgrade with the CE-level 2 rated.
Sky will be transmitting the European Champions League final in 3D, and most home- and pub-based viewers will need to wear 3D glasses. Sky’s 3D productions and broadcasts are tailored specifically to the needs of glasses-based technologies, but iPont’s technology converts the standard live Sky 3D broadcast for viewing on autostereo displays, and this will be demonstrated to an invited audience at the Walkabout pub in Covent Garden, London on Saturday evening.
IPont gave several demonstrations at Screen Media Expo, including 3D Blu-ray and football matches, though none of the latter were broadcast live. They were using autostereo displays from Tridelity and Alioscopy.
As with all 3D content, the production quality of the material varied, but in general the 3D effect was impressive, at least relative to most other autostereo demonstrations I have seen. IPont claims that its current technology supports nine viewing angles, but I did not notice as strong a deterioration in viewing experience between viewing points as with some other technologies, such as Toshiba’s autostereo TVs. IPont’s “secret sauce” is a box of software tricks which converts stereo 3D, on the fly, to multi-angle autostereo 3D. Autostereo displays rely on the availability of multiple angles in the video content which generate multiple viewing angles from the display. The (extremely) expensive way to do this is to set up multiple camera positions during content production, but this is always likely to prove cost-prohibitive. IPont’s current technology works at the consumer or viewer end, and could be included in 3DTVs themselves (iPont is in discussion with leading TV manufacturers).