• About
  • Contact Me
  • Privacy Policy

  • About
  • Contact Me
  • Privacy Policy

Home » Technology » Sony shows 3D laptop due in 2011

Sony shows 3D laptop due in 2011

Posted by: BlackCode    Tags:  2011, 3D, 3d button, 3D image, 3D imaging, 3D products, 3D rate, 3D technology, 3D television, active-shutter glasses, Berlin, big screen experience, bigger hit, blank screens, Bloomberg L.P., blu ray players, Blu-ray Disc, Bravia TVs, chief executive, CNET, Company, Cup soccer tournament, digital cinema projectors, electronic engineering, Electronics, electronics shows, entire press conference, eye views, forthcoming vaio laptop, game titles stringer, graphics chip, High-definition television, high-end 3D cameras, Howard Stringer, IFA electronics, Imaging, Kazuo Hirai, Killzone 3, Laptop, large screen, left eyes, Many people, MLB baseball, mortal kombat, Motor Storm Apocalypse, movie avatar, movie cinemas, necessary premium, new firmware, Optics, Panasonic, Plasma display, plasma tv screens, PlayStation 3, press conference, press conference touting 3D technology, Product Release, prototypes, Real D, RealD Cinema, required glasses, Resident Evil Afterlife, right-eye views, screen experience, sequential technology, Shows, shutter glasses, shutter system, Sir Howard Stringer, small set, Sony, sony pictures, sony plans, Spiderman sequel, steady inroads, stephen shankland, Stereoscopy, Super Stardust HD, Technology, Technology Internet, the Green Hornet, the World Cup, TV channel, ultimate products, Vaio, vaio laptop, vaios, Video, video projector, virtual tennis, WV-90    Posted date:  September 2, 2010  |  No comment

BERLIN–In 2011, Sony plans to join the small set of companies that offer laptops that can dislpay 3D video and games at 1080p resolution.

The company showed off prototypes of a forthcoming Vaio laptop at the IFA electronics show here Wednesday, models that come with a “3D” button and active-shutter glasses to separate what the right and left eyes see.

“3D Vaios will debut next spring,” said Sir Howard Stringer, Sony’s chief executive, in a press conference touting 3D technology and Sony’s commitment to it. Sony also touted other 3D products and content at the show.

The protoypes shown at IFA use “frame-sequential” technology that rapidly cycles the full screen between left-eye and right-eye views, with blank screens in between each to reduce the “crosstalk” that can reduce 3D image quality.

That means the laptop must be able to display video at 240 frames per second to keep up with a 3D rate of 60 frames per second. Sony wouldn’t reveal whose graphics chip is used in the system. Sony’s also cautioned that the ultimate products may be different from the prototypes it showed.

The 3D Vaio comes with a 3D button to set it for use in 3D mode. Otherwise, it behaves like a normal laptop with 1,920x1080-pixel resolution.
 (Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET)

IFA, like electronics shows before it, has become a showcase for 3D technology. Many people are indifferent or even hostile about the technology so far, or at least unwilling to pay the necessary premium, but it’s also making steady inroads across the electronics and computing industry.

Sony also announced at IFA that some existing Blu-ray players and PlayStation 3 will be retrofitted with new firmware making them 3D-capable. Among 3D game titles Stringer showed were Tumble, the Sly Trilogy, Mortal Kombat, Virtual Tennis 4, Killzone 3, Super Stardust HD, The Fight, Motor Storm Apocalypse, and MLB baseball.

For those who want a really big screen experience, Sony announced a 3D video projector, the WV-90. It will use the same active-shutter system as Sony’s Bravia TVs, meaning that the required glasses will work across the line.

The entire press conference was displayed live on a large screen above the stage. Sony opted to use Real D’s 3D technology, which today is found in many movie cinemas. Panasonic, which also tooted its 3D horn at IFA, opted instead to use an array of 54 of its own plasma TV screens. Sony, it should be noted, also sells digital cinema projectors and high-end 3D cameras, including some used to shoot the movie Avatar.

Sony, unlike some of its competitors, is a content company. Here, the company plans to tackle 3D aggressively, too.

Sony also plans to launch its own 3D TV channel, Stringer said, with content to include natural history, children’s programming, science, and motion pictures, Stringer said . And Sony Pictures plans several 3D movies soon: Resident Evil Afterlife, the Green Hornet, another Spiderman sequel, and another Men in Black sequel.

“Being shot in 3D doesn’t automatically guarantee success,” Stringer said. “What counts is how well you tell a story. A hit is a still a hit is still a hit–except in 3D it’s a bigger hit.”

And then there are the staples. Sony plans to release by the end of 2010 a Blu-ray disk of highlights of the World Cup soccer tournament, Stringer said.

Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-30685_3-20015335-264.html#ixzz0yKJ5aXSZ

Incoming search terms for the article:

  • upcoming laptops 2011 (65)
  • new laptops 2011 (65)
  • new sony vaio 2011 (55)
  • 2011 laptops (45)
  • sony vaio 2011 (39)

    Share This
About the author
BlackCode



Related Posts

Norton Internet Security 2011 Review
Interface Norton Internet Security 2011 is full of some changes to its interface; however the design is heavily suggestive of the earlier versions. It keeps the black dark theme, organized by yellow text. There are good...


F-Secure Internet Security Suite 2010/2011 Review
Description of the program: An important added layer of protection against malware and new emerging ones is enhanced through the “Deep Guard behavior analysis”. Safer web surfing can be ensured with...


AVG Anti-Virus Free 2011 Review
The design: The buttons on the new interface are big and clear, though it was hard to fit all these buttons into a small interface. It was desirable to have a smaller interface combining all the buttons but it would be hard...


Wanna say something?





  Cancel Reply

« 50 Free Online Games
Motorola Backflip (AT&T) – Unboxing and Hands-On »



 

 
copyright for ComputersZine.com 2005-2011 all rights received.