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When it comes to home entertainment, 3D is the buzzword of 2011. Listen to what the manufacturers and retailers are saying, and you'd believe your living room simply isn't up to scratch if it ...
Only 2 percent of TVs in the U.S. are able to show 3D programming, according to the most recent data from research firm IHS Screen Digest. That's about 6.9 million sets out of 331 million.
Using technology from RealD, the cable provider is offering customers high-def 3D content, starting with a Rangers-Islanders hockey game. The catch? You have to have a 3D-compatible TV.
Here’s an interesting tool for making simple 3D games. It’s called 3DPL, the 3D programming language, and it’s a real-time interpreted language that allows you to create cubes and… ...
The main problem with owning a network that specializes in 3D is that there isn’t a ton of 3D programming around to fill the schedule. With that in mind, 3Net -- the 3D cable channel owned by ...
Although most people who watch the show do so in normal 2D, Indigo has recently been shooting a 3D version of it at the same time for 3Net, the 3D programming joint venture owned by Discovery ...
Networks that were hoping to support 3D programming didn’t even last that long. DirecTV canceled its 3D channel in 2012 and ESPN pulled the plug on its 3D channel in 2013.
FashionTV has decided to extend its FashionTV H3D broadcast of 3D fashion shows. As announced by RRsat and FashionTV in February 2011, viewers and operators of AsiaSat 5, Eurobird 9a and Intelsat 805 ...
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