- Joined
- Apr 29, 2008
- Messages
- 742 (0.13/day)
- Location
- Auckland
System Name | PBD |
---|---|
Processor | Core i5 760 @ 4.0GHz |
Motherboard | Asus Maximus III Gene |
Cooling | Corsair H-50-1 |
Memory | 4 x 4096mb G.Skill Ripjaws 1600 Cas7 |
Video Card(s) | ASUS GTX 670 DirectCU TOP |
Storage | Crucial 256GB SSD (system) + 2x Samsung F3 1TB (storage) + 2x 2TB Raid-1 NAS (backup) |
Display(s) | Dell SP2309w 23" 2048x1152 |
Case | Antec Max Fusion Remote |
Power Supply | Corsair AX750W |
Software | Win 7 Pro x64 |
That sounds good until you see the Holographic stuff they got at science museums and coming soon to Stadiums...and as seen on CNN
It literally blows 3D-TV and Movies away and looks like stuff out of Scify movies.
I was at the Rock Hall of Fame got bored so I went next door to the Cleveland Science Museum and they had a Holographic Display up that just Amazed me..Nothing I seen in that display said this is more than a decade away from home use..
As far as Movies go They have to be 3D because most people Have a Better view in the home now and it's basically a business saving gimmick.
Don't get me wrong I just don't think this Nvidia 3D will go anywhere but it is kind of neat..
But as said OLD..
I don't know much about the holographic stuff, so please enlighten me - when you are looking at a holographic image, and you are not moving relative to the media displaying the hologram, does it have depth? Or is the depth/3D effect only appear when you physically move?