dimanche 27 mars 2011

Are smartphones 3D right for you? Perhaps not yet...

EVO 3D 660x439 Are 3D smartphones right for you? Maybe not yet ...

This week at the CTIA 2011 in Orlando, we saw something that we have not really seen in smartphones to: free glasses 3D displays. We knew that they came from, but it is certainly something to keep in hand and see for yourself. Two points were very certainly the 3D HTC EVO for Sprint and LG Thrill 4 G for AT & T. The two are able to capture and display of pictures in three dimensions and images that you can display on your phone, but this is our first problem.

A few Parties in Orlando, I kept hearing the word "gimmick" when others would describe smartphones 3D. Indeed, it seems like something because its usefulness is limited and your ability to share content is practically non-existent. You cannot share 3D photos and videos on Twitter, Facebook or Flickr at the moment, but perhaps that will change if this 3D thing really took off.

3D phones have a long way to go. I spent lot of time with both the HTC EVO 3D and the LG Thrill 4 G and neither a truly seduced me. It is interesting to see the two cameras on the back of the phones, which indicate the ability to record 3D photos and videos. It is also pretty cool to see content on the phone when you can actually see it-another problem with the technology now.

The viewing angle is so limited that it is difficult to do things when it is in your hands. He shares with others standing around you makes it even more difficult. In the meantime to get my hands on a device, the person would me saying: "Oh, this seems really cool!" Check it out! "But no matter how hard they tried to corner to make visible by me, she has ever worked. Things must be perfectly aligned and the phone must be in your hands so that the effect of work.

When it does not, however, it is really cool. As there is a whole new world in your smartphone. Image and video samples in 3D of the EVO were almost perfect. Even without glasses, images and videos have been crisp and colors were rich and vivid. But if you have pushed the wire and the smartphone moved a centimeter in both cases, you would hit with the blur effect.

Are phones 3D the future of multimedia on our smart phones? I would not bet against it, but at the moment the technology seems really limited and I do not see users taking it because it really is a solo experience. We are so accustomed with sharing the minutiae of our lives through Twitter, Facebook, Foursquare, Flickr and other social networks that it would be disappointing to have experience of cool 3D photos and images that we ourselves.