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3d mobile phone handsets and technology, everything you ever need to know about mobile 3d

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Posted on | October 13, 2011 | No Comments

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LG new 3D mobile handset

Posted on | October 13, 2011 | No Comments


Lg new 3d handset has it the market in a big way.
Be the first to own a handset..

lg-3d-phone

lg-3d-phone

3d mobile Phones next big thing?

Posted on | May 27, 2011 | 3 Comments


With all mobile providers moving towards 3d mobile phones we ask the question what do you think of mobile 3d? the lastest nintendo 3ds hasnt had such a good start and 3d Tv is yet to really take off. What is going to happen to mobile 3d? We think the next big thing will be the IPAD 3d!! how cool would the IPAD be with 3d technology. Allow the best games to be played on a tablet 3d device..


LG Optimus 3D Mobile Phone

Posted on | February 15, 2011 | 1 Comment

Today sees the launch of the LG Optimus 3D Mobile Phone.

The Technology Giant LG have launched the 3D mobile Handest at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona and it is the first mass market 3D phone to hit the Mobile Marketplace

The 3D cellphone is aimed mainly for the use of clients wanting to watch movies and playing games. This may tie in nicely with the new Play Station Phone. We are seeing the next big move in mobile technology here so keep your eyes peeled for any developments!

LG 3d Mobile handsets

Posted on | February 1, 2011 | 1 Comment

Lg launch a 3d Mobile handset, we are here to bring you all the news

lg 3d mobile handset

lg 3d mobile handset

We saw the screen in action on the company’s stand at the Las Vegas Convention Centre and on various videos and games, and we can report that the 3D effect was very impressive indeed. It’s definitely something that we’ll be looking forward to seeing more of in the future.

The 4.3-inch 3D display uses an applied parallax barrier technology, which delivers a series of light-blocking slits attached to the front of the LCD panel. The slits, or barriers, ensure that the left and right eyes see different images, creating an illusion of depth and a thoroughly convincing 3D effect.

LG 3d mobile handsets

LG 3d mobile handsets


The screen produces the illusion of depth without the need for special glasses, and includes a pair of five-megapixel lenses for taking 3D photos and video. A spokesperson for LG said the smartphone would go on sale in Australia in June but said there were no details yet on whether it would be locked to a carrier like Telstra, Optus or Vodafone/3.

The phone must be held at the proper distance and angle in order for the viewer to perceive depth, much like Nintendo’s 3DS handheld game console, which is based on a similar screen technology. Glasses-free 3D is easier to achieve with small screens than with TV-size ones.

The Optimus 3D runs Google’s Android operating system.

LG has already announced a tablet with a 3D camera, the G-Slate. It won’t have a true 3D screen, so the user will need wear red-blue glasses to see depth when using the camera.

Nintendo 3DS – How 3D Will Work

Posted on | January 20, 2011 | 4 Comments

Mobiles to use Nintendo technology??

So, there’s new Nintendo hardware on the way. It’s a 3D handheld system. How, though, will that 3D work? Maybe a recent obscure DSi release offers some clues.

Since we know absolutely nothing about the new handheld other than the fact it will employ 3D and won’t need glasses, all we’ve left on how it actually works is speculation. So, let’s speculate!

DSiWare puzzle game, available in Japan, that uses the DSi’s camera to track the movement of the console, and adjust the image accordingly to make it appear “3D”.

nintendo-3ds

nintendo-3ds

Nintendo didn’t announce a price for the console, but did say that retail outlets have been given a trade price and it is up to them to decide how much to sell it for. HMV has already started pricing the device for pre-order on their website at £229.99.

It’s entirely feasible – taking into account Nintendo’s obsession with keeping the cost of its hardware down – that Hidden Picture is a pointer towards how the 3DS will work.

I mean, take a look at the current technology that allows 3D viewing without glasses. It’s expensive. Nintendo don’t do expensive anymore, since the average consumer won’t buy expensive.

So, like the Wii, Nintendo may well “fudge” it. The Wii, while impressive in 2006, cut a lot of corners in terms of responsiveness and accuracy when it came to motion controls, something that’s only been recently rectified by the release of the Wii MotionPlus. Why? Not because Nintendo lacked the tech; it was because Nintendo had to keep the cost of the console and its peripherals down.

The 3DS could do something similar. Sure, it could use expensive, advanced technology to display 3D on a handheld, but that would drive the cost of the device up. So it won’t. Instead, Nintendo could employ the same basic technology used in Hidden Picture, only using a combination of more advanced cameras and a boost in performance (which would be necessary for the 3D tech) .

After all, Nintendo stated specifically that the 3DS would be compatible not just with the DS, but the DSi as well, suggesting it has cameras. And Nintendo president Satoru Iwata said it himself, when stating that when it came to designing his company’s next handheld, it would “be necessary to have a sensor with the ability to read the movements of people playing”. When we first heard that it seemed like the handheld would be using motion controls, but it could just as easily be referring to the means by which the console displays 3D images.

As for the rest of the handheld’s specifications and abilities, aside from the “DS” part suggesting a return to dual screens, we know even less. But we’ve already provided our wish list on that, so we won’t bother with that again.

HTC to be first with 3D Android phone

Posted on | December 1, 2010 | No Comments

With 3d Handsets on the horizon, mobile phone manufacturer HTC is aiming to be the first to market with an Android smartphone featuring a full 3D screen.

Great news indeed for anybody that has ever wanted to watch Avatar on the train home.

HTC was actually demonstrating 3D mobiles at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona back in February of this year, although those tech demos were mainly being used to show off the latest capabilities of its smartphone chips, not to showcase finalised handsets.

Yet now, as we rapidly approach MWC 2011 next February, HTC is making noises about its desire to move into (and lead) the 3D mobile phone market.

Who you wouldnt put money on Apple being right benhind them with I phone 3d.

Sharp Galapagos bring glasses-free 3D Android lovers

Posted on | November 17, 2010 | 6 Comments


sharp galapagos 3d handset

sharp galapagos 3d handset

Sharp has just produced a pair of glasses-free 3D Android handsets for Japan’s Softbank network in the form of the touchscreen slate 003SH and and QWERTY-sliding 005SH

here are the first images of the new phone

The 003SH is coming this December, to be followed by the 005SH in February.

Samsung W960 AMOLED 3D Mobile handset

Posted on | November 17, 2010 | 1 Comment

Samsung have announced the launch of the Samsung W960 AMOLED 3D which is what we have been waiting for. The beginning of a new generation of 3D mobile phones. Thankfully you don’t need special glasses to view the 3D display. The phone is a basic candy bar design with no outstanding features to comment about.

here is one of first pictures of the samsung 3d handset

Samsung-W960-3d-mobile-handset

Samsung-W960-3d-mobile-handset

 At the moment there is no indication of price or contract, but as this information comes available we will let you know.

First shots of 3d mobile screen

Posted on | November 16, 2010 | 3 Comments

KDDI have been showing off a new prototype LCD display screen destined for mobile phones that’s capable of showing 3D images. Obviously you don’t get the full effect in the picture here, but that’s because you’re not just seeing one image: you’re seeing two, projected and interlaced by two separate LCD displays, one of which outputs images for the left eye, and the other for the right eye.
With each image subtly different in position, the technique uses these stereoscopic LCD displays to fools the eye into thinking it’s a real 3D image that’ being perceived. KDDI were demonstrating a prototype with a resolution of 480 x 800 pixels, and both still images and video could be viewed in 3D.

first 3d mobile image

first 3d mobile image

keep looking »
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