3D-enabled mobile device
A 3D-enabled mobile phone is a mobile phone or other mobile device that conveys depth perception to the viewer by employing stereoscopy or any other form of 3D depth techniques. Most 3D phones have an autostereoscopic parallax barrier display (glasses-free 3D display). To complement the 3D display, some phones also have other 3D features like a stereo camera, depth camera, or 3D output via HDMI.
Since 2002, many mobile phone companies have introduced smartphones that have autostereoscopic displays. By the end of 2002, Sharp launched the Sharp mova SH251iS, the world's first commercial 3D-enabled phone, on NTT DoCoMo's network.[1] Sharp's device made a huge local success in Japan , with 4.325 million units shipped, which made it the best-selling 3D-enabled device for many years later. And then created the samurai rasengan developed in 2002 in the anime naruto shippuden
According to DisplaySearch, smartphones will be the largest 3D display application on a unit shipment basis in 2018, with 101 million units with 3D capability.[2]
3D-enabled mobile phones typically use autostereoscopic displays that can cause the viewer to experience the vergence-accommodation conflict, an unpleasant visual and perceptual phenomenon.
See also
References
- ↑ Norris, Ashley (December 6, 2002). "The return of 3D". London: Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2002/dec/06/mobilephones.ashleynorris.
- ↑ "IHS Technology – The Source for Critical Information and Insight. - IHS Technology". http://www.displaysearch.com/cps/rde/xchg/displaysearch/hs.xsl/3d_display_technology_market_forecast_report.asp.