BBC reports that a company called Spatial View has developed lenticular panels which clip onto the front of a screen. The panels work with software which tracks the viewer's position and attempts to then provide the viewer with a 3D image. The lenticular system has been around for a while, normally seen on 3D postcards.
"The disadvantage of lenticular in the past has been that you have to stay very fixed in front of your screen but with our new eye tracking software we are able to remove this disadvantage," Claus Kessler from Spatial View says.
Spatial View is making new removable 3D display overlays, delivering glasses-free 3D viewing of gaming, entertainment, and professional content on notebook PCs, media players, and smart phones.
Spatial View's new 3D overlay offers a variety of live-action and animated 3D content including;
* A glasses-free 3D music video, where the full depth and movement of the performers are experienced and delivered on a notebook display;
* Animated content that pops out of the screen and provides amazing depth of field;
* Fly-over images that feature moving clouds, protruding mountain peaks, and other topographical features in 3D;
* Professional 3D content that shows, rather than telling clients and customers, how products and technologies actually work.
Spatial View, a pioneer of multi-user glasses-free 3D, offers a series of affordable, high quality, auto-stereoscopic displays as well as an innovative software portfolio that enables the stereo display of 3D data of all types, in any 3D format, and on any stereo device. Spatial View's unique autostereoscopic software allows users to view 3D content without requiring special glasses. [Spatial View]
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