What can you say about 2D to 3D conversion?
Tags:
- HDTV
- 3D
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Samsung
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Home Theatre
Last response: in Streaming Video & TVs
wittybartz
July 26, 2012 10:04:45 AM
yang0409
July 26, 2012 10:09:49 AM
Tom1283
July 27, 2012 12:29:01 AM
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Roy84
July 27, 2012 12:45:58 AM
wittybartz
July 27, 2012 2:59:46 AM
yang0409
July 27, 2012 4:20:07 AM
wittybartz
July 27, 2012 4:53:37 AM
yang0409
July 27, 2012 5:24:53 AM
trepxe
July 27, 2012 5:32:07 AM
Tom1283
July 27, 2012 5:39:15 AM
yang0409 said:
For their new remote I didn't see any button for 2d to 3d conversion but I know that their old remote has it. Both samsung and lg aimed to have less buttons on their new remotes which I think is a good idea.Yeah, but I think there are more people who appreciate lg's remote than samsung's. LG's remote is awkward to use at first because it resembles a wii controller but I think it's still better than samsung. I think the track pad in samsung's remote is more difficult to use.
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jcoultas98
July 27, 2012 5:55:19 AM
yang0409
July 27, 2012 5:55:22 AM
Tom1283 said:
Yeah, but I think there are more people who appreciate lg's remote than samsung's. LG's remote is awkward to use at first because it resembles a wii controller but I think it's still better than samsung. I think the track pad in samsung's remote is more difficult to use.I thought I was the only one who felt that using the remote was awkward. Although after a few months of using it I don't feel that way anymore. Probably it was just in the beginning because it was not really like the typical remote we're used to.
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yang0409
July 27, 2012 6:07:15 AM
jcoultas98 said:
You guys are way off track on the thread. 3D in general gives me a headache, now automatic 2D-3D is worse. pass, thank you.
Probably you might have watched from an active 3d tv. What I heard is that flickering, which is how active 3d normally works, causes headaches. I'm not sure about this though because my lg tv uses passive 3d which doesn't involve flickering.
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jcoultas98
July 27, 2012 3:30:53 PM
Movie Theater 3D gives me as much of a headache as any active 3DTV (which I own). The Flickering of the active set does not bother me. 3D in general gives me a massive headache. Active and passive each has their strengths and weaknesses. If you have not actually seen active 3D vs passive 3D, you don't have any idea which is better. Kudos to LG for their incredible marketing job on passive.
TLDR: Real 3D gives me a headache, Fake 3D is worse.
TLDR: Real 3D gives me a headache, Fake 3D is worse.
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slrmichael
July 30, 2012 8:25:26 AM
yang0409
July 30, 2012 8:50:29 AM
jcoultas98 said:
Movie Theater 3D gives me as much of a headache as any active 3DTV (which I own). The Flickering of the active set does not bother me. 3D in general gives me a massive headache. Active and passive each has their strengths and weaknesses. If you have not actually seen active 3D vs passive 3D, you don't have any idea which is better. Kudos to LG for their incredible marketing job on passive.TLDR: Real 3D gives me a headache, Fake 3D is worse.
In short, you just don't like the 2d to 3d conversion feature.
I agree though that active and passive 3d tvs have their own pros and cons. I experienced using both types and I find passive 3d more convenient for me.
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gabelevvvy
July 31, 2012 4:52:55 AM
yang0409
August 1, 2012 8:40:32 AM
gabelevvvy said:
I think the level or tolerance or sensitivity for 3D varies among viewers. There are some models that you can control 3D depth, so you might want to try one.Right! I think the new models of 3d tvs have the depth control feature too aside from the 2d ro 3d conversion. My lg has it and I can choose from 20 3d depth levels.
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jcoultas98
August 1, 2012 4:58:19 PM
This is very true.
From wiki:
It is believed that approximately 12% of people are unable to properly see 3D images, owing to a variety of medical conditions. According to another experiment up to 30% of people have very weak stereoscopic vision preventing depth perception based on stereo disparity. This nullifies or greatly decreases immersion effects of digital stereo to them.
There is also a group on the other end who are extremely sensitive to stereoscopic vision. Those people develop headaches regardless of the depth effect. Sometimes, our brain doesn't like to be fooled.
From wiki:
It is believed that approximately 12% of people are unable to properly see 3D images, owing to a variety of medical conditions. According to another experiment up to 30% of people have very weak stereoscopic vision preventing depth perception based on stereo disparity. This nullifies or greatly decreases immersion effects of digital stereo to them.
There is also a group on the other end who are extremely sensitive to stereoscopic vision. Those people develop headaches regardless of the depth effect. Sometimes, our brain doesn't like to be fooled.
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peteredward
August 2, 2012 1:48:18 AM
yang0409
August 3, 2012 7:42:15 AM
peteredward said:
I have an LG 3D TV and it has that feature as well. It does a fairly good job of converting 2D to 3D. However, the 3D is not as in-depth compared to a film that is already filmed in 3D.I don't think we can really expect up converted materials to be as good as those that were originally shot in 3d. How many times have you used this feature? On the average, I use my lg's 2d to 3d conversion twice a week. I'm trying to use it with different kinds of shows. From news to talent shows to reality shows.
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joeman99
January 13, 2013 6:21:36 PM
Some 3D content is great and I prefer it to 2D. But most 3D is poorly shot and persistently annoying and horrible. Shooting in 3D takes much more technical expertise. I'd only recommend passive 3D TV's like Vizio and LG, which give a totally natural, headache-free, magical experience. 2D-to-3D conversion is always horrible, like warping the front of your screen without taking on the actual shapes of the objects being shown. The excellent conversion of Titanic cost many millions of dollars and was closely overseen by James Cameron himself. Computers aren't yet smart enough to know the real shapes of objects in a 2D video.
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geekneeze
August 28, 2014 10:40:34 PM
2D to 3D video conversion is the process of transforming 2D ("flat") film to 3D form, which in almost all cases is stereo, so it is the process of creating imagery for each eye from one 2D image. And UFUWare 3D Converter is a great choice for converting 2D video to 3D, 3D video to 2d video format, 3d to 3d conversion.
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