gold333 wrote:rich1701 wrote:TV manufacturers are ending 3D tv production. The technology is dead.
IMAX 3D cinemas are still as available as ever and home entertainment projectors that are 3D are still being released as of this month.
movies are different than tv shows.
also, people are already complaining about 3D cinemas. The 'problem' is, that a lot of cinemas nowadays are shoving 3D down your throat as you don't have much option to see it otherwise.
I follow quite an amount of movie news about a grand variety of movies, and the common reactien on about 80% of the people and movie-goers is that they prefer seeing IMAX, and not 3D. They even prefer seeing IMAX instead of IMAX 3D.
not only is the 3D glasses always a pain in the rear as it's annyoing, you can't focus well and its tiresome for the eyes,
whereas you don't have that problem with IMAX.
3D tv's are being sold as there has been made a multiple-year market for it, and a certain type of television technology will and MUST be sold to 'earn back' the investment made for the technology. If you can afford a decent 3D TV at home, you can afford a quality set of 3D glasses, and then it's rather different. Most people that i know that have this stuff, don't actually watch 3D movies, but watch 3D concerts and 3D documentaries. But the actual fact is, they hardly do that more than once a month, the rest of the time, it's normal TV.
So the above posters are right about that 3D is dying and will once again fade into oblivion, just like it did a couple of decades ago. It's far-far from new.
As with the VR technology. Not new at all either, and will fade away just as soon.
Which brings us again to the point made before: there will NEVER be 3D formats for F1 (live) broadcasting.
i will state that with the fullest to the fullest confidence. Never. Ever.