BossTamsin (imported) wrote: Tue May 03, 2011 2:20 pm
Actually, I've been wondering about going a slightly different direction with things...
If a 120hz TV is capable of displaying separate left and right images to form a 3D picture, what about having it display two completely separate feeds?
Then get two sets of glasses where both lenses are polarized the same way (or are on the same shutter cycle, or whatever tech your TV uses), but each set is polarized differently.
I'm not sure how sound would work, but you would wind up with two people on the same couch, watching two different channels at the same time.
Yes, that would work. The technology to make 120Hz cost-effective is pretty recent. For example, you'd need two tuners running or for video games would need to render both separately. However, for two 2D it is probably possible today. For two 3D pictures you'd need 240Hz, but that wouldn't be far away, and that could support four people watching at 2D, etc.
That is actually a pretty decent idea. I think the sound might be the harder part because the tv technology hasn't been architected for multiple sound streams out.
But then you get to the point that Moi makes: if you're wearing glasses anyway, at some point you might as well have the screen in the glasses. Since people spend about $2k on a big tv anyway, you could pack a lot of technology into the glasses if you didn't need to spend the money on the tv.
In some ways, I think tablets, mobiles and netbooks are sort of filling this space too. Instead of everyone watching one $2k tv, you have each person in the family watching their own $500 personal screen. If you're wearing headsets, the sound is pretty immersive so you don't need a big home theater receiver and speaker set up.