Since the glasses are tinted, is the screen made to be overly bright, to compensate, or is the whole 3d experience unavoidably dark?
Somebody needs to do an article which outlines the following: 1) What 3d technologies exist (from the red/blue glasses to wearing two small TVs on your face), 2) which theater-based technology gives the most satisfying experience (red/blue glasses being at one end of that spectrum), and 3) which technology is likely to be installed at one's local theater when Avatar rolls out.
“An engineer explained to us that hundreds of ear impressions were gathered in the name of research, and while each one obviously boasted its own unique shape and size, one single characteristic remained uniform across the board: the entrance into the ear canal is not a perfect circle, it's an oval.”
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Since the glasses are tinted, is the screen made to be overly bright, to compensate, or is the whole 3d experience unavoidably dark?
Somebody needs to do an article which outlines the following: 1) What 3d technologies exist (from the red/blue glasses to wearing two small TVs on your face), 2) which theater-based technology gives the most satisfying experience (red/blue glasses being at one end of that spectrum), and 3) which technology is likely to be installed at one's local theater when Avatar rolls out.