HoloVizio: Holographic Style 3D Displays

There has been a lot of buzz recently with a series of new stereo 3d displays hitting the market. Big companies like Samsung have even started integrating 3d technology into their mainstream product lines. However, all of the current consumer-level solutions require extra steps to get the 3d effect to work (such as wearing glasses, etc.). There are a few high-end sets available that don’t need glasses, like the Phillips WOW displays, but still require users to stand in a particular “hot-spot” for the effect to work. The guys over at Holografika have come up with another technology they call the HoloVizio. This type of 3d display can enable an unlimited amount of users to view a 3d image on the monitor all from different angles without the use of special glasses.
The HoloVizio line is nothing new. Its been around a few years, targeting mainly billboard-style advertisements (i.e. the big $$$). However, it appears the same team is now behind a new EU-funded research project called COHERENT based upon these holographic-style displays and gesture recognition technology.
“The aim of the COHERENT project was to create a new networked holographic audio-visual platform to support real-time collaborative 3-D interaction between geographically distributed teams,” explains Akos Demeter, spokesperson for the project.
This is something science-fiction writers have been talking about for ages, and it seems we are at a point where it may soon become a reality. There’s so much potential uses for this in the field of education, as well as teleconferencing, immersive gaming, hell, even online gambling! These guys were talking about medical applications and, um, “applying holographic systems for oil exploration”.
But like anything else in the VR realm, theres always a lot more talk than actual substance. But I think these guys have their stuff together. Although it doesn’t look like there any photos of this new system they are designing, I did find this pretty cool video for their latest display, the 120WLD. Can’t embed it, unfortunately, but you can click here to watch it on YouTube.
As you can see from the video, the device accurately displays different images when the camera pans from side to side. This is not using any sort of head-tracking “tricks” like in the Johnny Lee DesktopVR video. The 3d effect is a physical property of the way the image is displayed. So unlike head-tracking methods which work for only one person, this provides an experience for any number of viewers. No idea on price. Its not listed so surely its more than I can afford. But hopefully in about 5 or 10 years this stuff will be cheap enough for the mass market.
link: Star Trek-style 3-D displays make their debut [Physorg] // via: KurzweilAI
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