Multi-layer LCD Displays 100
Jmo writes "Puredepth has started to produce multi-layer LCD displays. They manipulate LCD technology so that one screen can be placed behind another for actual depth. This technology has not even come close to being fully taken advantage of but it is still very interesting and has many implications for the future. Their main product right now is a seventeen inch monitor, the MLD-3000. It is mainly targeted at medical and business fields but it could be used all over."
The price (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The price (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:The price (Score:1)
Finally! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Finally! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Finally! (Score:2)
Re:Finally! (Score:1)
Absolutely. That would be just as smart as bolting a compact-car onto the roof of your SUV so you can enjoy the benefits of high fuel mileage and tremendous storage space.
Well, no, that was unfair. It would be like gluing a 22 and 45 caliber rifle together, so you always have the right firepower for large and small game.
Re:Finally! (Score:2, Interesting)
Google is the shizzat.
Re:Finally! (Score:2)
Hmm... (Score:4, Funny)
Like pr0n right?
Come on, some one was going to say it.
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
3D (Score:4, Insightful)
Well, I'm sure this will be discussed in much more detail on Monday when the dupe will be posted.
Re:3D (Score:3, Insightful)
You're mistaken. With two eyes, two layers is all you need.
Re:3D (Score:2, Interesting)
They are just onion skin layers, and need to be a volumetric cube to be a true 3d display (Yes, your 1 display per eye is right, but for a group of people looking its impractical)
I am hoping for a rotating drum with spokes made of LEDs to give a true volume area that would be viewable by all, but thats about as likely as a flying car, so I wont hold my breath.
Re:3D (Score:3, Informative)
Have a screen at the bottom of the display, and one at the back of the display and a half-way mirror/beam splitter reflecting the bottom screen to your eyes.
e.g.
| / -->eyes
|/__
Re:3D (Score:4, Interesting)
You don't need glasses. I'm not sure about the actual LCD used in this thing, but I wouldn't be surprised if it's using the same technology Sharp uses in their laptop. I've seen the Sharp techology demoed and as someone who basically doesn't know anything about all of this, I was totally astounded.
Luckily, Sharp conveniently explains how it works [sharp-world.com] -- they use something called a "parallax barrier", which, as the name implies, basically makes it so you see one screen from one eye and the other from the other. Obviously this works best if you're immediately in front of the screen, but from the demo I saw, it worked from a wider angle than I would have thought.
Or you can read all of the past slashdot stories about it [slashdot.org]....
Re:3D (Score:2)
Sharp's tech has one screen split into two halfs. One half is aimed at your left eye, the other is aimed at your right. This allows you a full range of depth by altering the horizontal displacement between corresponding pixels on the left eye/right eye images.
Basically this tech is quite similar to how anaglyphs or magic eye images work.
The tech in TFA on the other hand has two screen where one is literally, physically behind the other. The depth is actually
Re:3D (Score:2)
I don't think that's actually the case. Note the complaint about the "stereoscopic" blur. I think that the monitor *has* a mode where it does basically what you're saying so that it can be used in a less useful way with non-adapted applications -- input from a secondary video input ispresented on a plane apparently behind the primary one.
This particular review is quite short and light on details, and it's *possible* that this is all this pa
Re:3D (Score:2)
I saw a demo of this back at Siggraph 2001. 3D? Nah. But having the foreground layer and the BG layer seperated was still a much nicer effect than the cross-eyed approach to 3D that has been done before.
Also, from a compuer using point of view, it was a little better, too. You could It showed the foreground window on the front plane and everything else in the back.
Not for ord. users but GIS guys maybe (Score:3, Insightful)
However, I do see a use in this for GIS [mithuro.com] applications. You can redefine the term overlay with this.
Re:Not for ord. users but GIS guys maybe (Score:2)
I'm a bit curious (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I'm a bit curious (Score:2)
Well, yeah, nobody quite got the implementation right. However, I can tell you that Disneyland still has the Muppet 3D adventure, Universal Studios still was Terminator and Shrek 3D, and Las Vegas has the Borg Experience '4D'. All big attractions. (well, the Muppet 3D one USED to be a big attraction, heh.)
" It didnt work in the cinema and personally I cant think of a compelling mainstream requirement for 3D on the desktop."
Err. If you're saying we can live with out
Re:I'm a bit curious (Score:2)
"There are more things in heaven and Earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
Before this gets modded Troll, the point is that the same thing was said about the automobile, the airplane, and the Popiel Pocket Fisherman. I'm not saying that this technology is on par with those, but frankly, who knows? If you
It's been done (Score:1)
You only get two layers (Score:2, Interesting)
The stuff I like the best is some mechanical drawings with cutaway views. A good illustrator can totally convey a 3-d structure. I guess what I am saying is that the answer may be a little more cleverness with conventional 2-d displays. The use of user-controlled
pointless (Score:3, Insightful)
Zounds! (Score:5, Insightful)
The practical applications that Puredepth advertises for its MLD displays are vast and far-reaching. In any application that would benefit from greater information density (such as backgrounds with changing overlays, work areas with tool palettes, etc.), the MLD adds true depth to what would usually be a simulated effect. The effect is truly amazing, especially when compared with a standard 2D display.
As you can see, this device is a GREAT benefit to the vast and far-reaching applications that would benefit from it. We could name them, but we'll settle for describing them abstractly. Suppose you have an application where you need to stack crap on top of other crap so that you can't read any of it. Well, this device is exactly what you need!
Seriously, take a look at the screenshot of this thing running:
Stacking crap so you can't read it [xyzcomputing.com]
In that pic, you can read everything, but it is clear that if you use your computer for things like text, this would be a nearly unusable monitor.
I love the article's conclusion:
Also, the technology, once refined, could be applied to displays with many layers, allowing for even more complex three-dimensional diagrams, such as skyscraper floor-plans, or "data clouds" with more than merely two levels within the depth hierarchy.[Poster's note: HOLY CRAP A 3D DISPLAY? THAT WOULD CHANGE THE WORLD IF it wasn't 25 years old.] Yet another possibility would be to juxtapose two or more different display formats in the same manner. Using a combination of standard LCD displays with super-bright OLED displays might lead to some interesting effects, making the distinguishing factors between layers consist of more factors than merely depth.
As innovators, I tip my hat to Puredepth, and I truly hope to see more products from them in the future.
Re:Zounds! (Score:4, Insightful)
In that pic, you can read everything, but it is clear that if you use your computer for things like text, this would be a nearly unusable monitor.
While I won't comment on the practical applications of this monitor, your comment shows a lack of understanding about photography. Since the camera taking the picture can only take one in 2 dimensions, the true dimensiality of the monitor cannot be grasped through a photo.
I would look at this monitor in person before making any cracks about its usability.
Re:Zounds! (Score:1, Flamebait)
Wait, so a camera doesn't steal my soul? No seriously, I'd love to hear your explanation of how "the true dimensiality of the monitor" actually works. Here's what I suggest:
Take two transparencies, such as for an overhead projector.
F
Re:Zounds! (Score:2)
You left out a critical point- the transparencies have to be of some spatially correlated data, such as an x-ray and radar imagining of the same object. In that case, the utility is obvious.
I am absolutely not saying that this gizmo is worth paying twice was a pair of normal LCDs would cost, but it does produce some benefit. Part of the reason it will never produce more benefit is because GUI to
Re:Zounds! (Score:1)
It was kind of neat when used "properly", that is when you used the demo custom version of PowerPoint they provided which showed different related content on each layer. You pretty much had to be sitting right in front of it for it to look good, though. Both layers were a bit washed out / hard to focus on, and reading was not as easy as on a traditional d
Re:You are, in fact, missing the point (Score:1)
Won't work in that instance. The nontrivial distance between the two screens means you cannot tell exactly how the border lines up. Shifting 4 cm in your chair will cause 20+ pixels of disalignment betw
Re:Zounds! (Score:2)
Wrong. If you actually sit in front of the monitor, you can see the rear images fairly easily, particularly if you are a dual-eyed human. By subtlely adjusting the convergence angle of your binocular vision, you can instantly shift focus on either the front or rear screen.
The images on the front screen are thin enough (text and gui elements) so that they can
Re:Zounds! (Score:1)
Graphics Card vs. Monitor - why this? (Score:2)
I can see that there might be occasional military applications where it actually makes sense, because you really really really don't want the different data streams on the same computer (e.g. the CNN feed on the background and the crosshairs for the satellite laser aimin
Alternative Lenticular LCD (Score:3, Informative)
what a great idea (Score:4, Funny)
"Sounds Cool"
subfolder "Probably Useless"
subfolder "What Moron Thought We Needed This?"
Thanks!
Re:what a great idea (Score:2)
"Sounds Cool"
subfolder "Probably Useless"
subfolder "The guy who created this has made a few dollars for himself at the expense of some morons who buy anything new and shiny without really thinking about a real use for said shiny object"
wbs.
Re:what a great idea (Score:2)
Hmm. Expect to see it on sale at ThinkGeek sometime soon, then.
eye focus (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:eye focus (Score:1)
not quie ready for general use (Score:4, Insightful)
However the article says: "Several quirks related to the product's design make it somewhat impractical for generalized use."
Slashdot has reached a new level of article posting. Now the poster doesn't have to RTFA anymore.
Yet another company makes a monitor... (Score:2, Informative)
Why is it news when another company jumps on the 3D using parallax bandwagon?
Sharp [sharpsystems.com] has done it, Toshiba [japancorp.net] has done it. All three are using the same layered LCD technology. Slashdot has covered each one now
BB
Re:Yet another company makes a monitor... (Score:1)
foveon like technology? (Score:1)
Most of these assumptions are too direct (Score:5, Insightful)
This is linear thinking- sort of like assuming that the powerful GPUs in video cards would only ever be used to render chrome spheres floating over checkerboard floors. Instead, different, more clever uses (like Quartz and Core Image) have emerged for that seemingly extravagant and surplus capability.
Similarly, I fell like somthing like this will be used to add an intangible quality to the dry 2d display- 'life' or 'vibrance.'
Imagine two displays that render the exact same image, except in the areas where it's tracking your eyes or mouse, the images are more in phase while the rest of the screen goes out of phase.
It could literally help focus your attention on the important info, where today's screens are limited to color, 'boldness' and opacity.
I think we won't see the real usefluness of this until it's had time for creative people to tinker with working examples of it, which is the case for most technology, really.
Re:Most of these assumptions are too direct (Score:3, Insightful)
Ok, and now let's imagine paying for 1 display and an API function that does a blur effect on areas that are not near the mouse. Your method requires a $1800 display. My method requires an API function and existing graphics hardware.
I think we won't see the real usefluness of this until it's had time for creative
Re:Most of these assumptions are too direct (Score:2)
Here is another analogy:
Two-layer LCD display would be able to give 3D in much the same way that the classic parallax shooters projected into 2D in the early nineties. Few 2D layers. Those by the way were pathetic with only two layers, and the more layers, the cooler it seemed.
However, something that does w
Liquid Crystal Display Display (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Liquid Crystal Display Display (Score:1)
Re:Liquid Crystal Display Display (Score:2)
Why use hardware? What is wrong with software? (Score:2)
Like this, you end up with one display being a little fuzzy, and it just looks confusing to me.
The article really doesn't sell it either - "It's good cos you can have toolbars and pallettes" - done in software - "The box looks cool" - great, I'd expect it to look good if I paid that much.
Someone
I've seen these (Score:1)
Re:I've seen these (Score:1)
Re:I've seen these (Score:1)
Just remember.... (Score:2)
Old technology? (Score:1)
For people who don't like been advertised to... (Score:2)
(Unless you want to see the other pics, and in that case knock yourself out)
Make your own... for ten bucks (Score:1)
I'm actually pretty disappointed that those LCD panels went the way of the dodo bird. They were pretty cool, and I dare say more convenient than integrated projectors (since with the old panels you could use dual-use the projector for.... overheads!)
-- Marcio
Dead pixels (Score:2)
White was a bad choice (Score:2)
If they could have picked any colour for the see-through colour, it should have been something other than white. See the screenshot they provide which shows just how bad it is when a web browser with Google on it is in front of another window.
Surely some colour like RGB(4,0,4) would be fairly uncommon, and a little more safe. Colours like that tend to be used for video overlays already, so they should work fine.
Re:White was a bad choice (Score:1)
The front LCD can't do the partial transparency effect you might be familiar with from Quartz because it can't add light to what is being transmitted through the back LCD, it can only darken the image further.
This seems like an unbelievably lame device to me, in that the layering is going to look worse and be more limited tha
Re:White was a bad choice (Score:1)
I've been trying to design a new type of LCD for a little while now, so I've had to do a bit of research.
Technically speaking, as I understand it, you can also do translucent by sending an analog voltage level to the pixel, but this probably won't work on a TFT type display as it actually uses a transistor for each pixel.
White is currently the *only* choice (Score:1)
I personally think this display is a cheap hack, not worth $1,799. You could buy two LCD displays, disassemble them and stack them if you're savvy enough. I've never
Hardware isn't the only solution (Score:2)
You could map white to RGB(255,255,254), and then map some other colour like RGB(4,0,4) to white.
I'm not entirely certain why this would be so hard to do, either, although two of you seem to think it is.
Re:Hardware isn't the only solution (Score:1)
Learn your RGB. (Score:2)
Already been done (Score:1)
About four or five years ago we did some development for a company from New Zealand called DeepVideo. They had a screen that was two LCD displays with one in front of the other.
Basically it was connected to by a dual head video card, and you basically had is spanned. The first half was on the front screen, the second was on the back.
LOL, I just looked up deepvideo and its the same guys. I guess its a re-release or something.
My experience with the original displays were that they we neat, but not terri
"LCD Displays" !? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)