What's interesting about this is that the tech has been proven dating back all the way to 2007 [1] and also re-implemented by enthusiasts many times over the years with better eye tracking via CV. What Sony has done here is refine it and package it in a way that's nice for end users.
Personally, I'd like to see this implemented more cheaply in larger displays to act as virtual windows for indoor environments, like [2] from 2010, but with 3D video/rendering.
From what I understand the display is still stereoscopic so you will see a separate image for each of your eyes.
Johnny Lee's demo was just a regular image with view-tracked parallax. It looks really impressive in a 2D video demo, but you'd immediately notice there's no depth if you saw it in person.
Cool, but in my opinion, not nearly as impressive as they're making it out to be. It uses eye tracking to give a single person a unique 3d point of view. That's nice for 1 person (and it's quite old tech).
Looking Glass is far more impressive and revolutionary in this area[0], as it's not limited by a single person's view.
I have access to a looking glass (the smallest one) and it's quite fun - especially when paired with a Leap Motion for hand tracking. I had the pleasure of demoing it to William Latham who adapted his work for it. ( http://latham-mutator.com/ )
So they way I understand it there’s no way for stereoscopic? (Two eyes see different things) with this technology? So not fully 3D, just viewpoint adjusted to viewers position?
> So they way I understand it there’s no way for stereoscopic? (Two eyes see different things) with this technology?
From the article: “A micro optical lens is layered on top of a 15.6-inch, 4K LCD display, which divides the image into the left and right eyes allowing for stereoscopic viewing”
> A micro optical lens is layered on top of a 15.6-inch, 4K LCD display, which divides the image into the left and right eyes allowing for stereoscopic viewing.
Personally, I'd like to see this implemented more cheaply in larger displays to act as virtual windows for indoor environments, like [2] from 2010, but with 3D video/rendering.
[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jd3-eiid-Uw
[2] https://hackaday.com/2010/04/16/virtual-windows-that-track-a...