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Showing posts with label 3D. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 3D. Show all posts

Hands on Review: LG 47LW540U Cinema 3D TV

With the LG 47LW540U Cinema 3D TV, can LG make home 3D more accessible? Read the review and find out!




When it comes to my house, very few things are more important to me than my gadgets (well, the girlfriend and dog both come a very close second), and one of the most important things in anyones house, is the TV.

The 47-inch LG 47LW540U Cinema 3D TV is a pretty good way to go. As 3D TV's are, they're a bit hit-and-miss, but LG's Cinema 3D range hopes to change all that. Leaving the ridiculous expense of Active 3D, LG has taken on the role as pioneer of Passive 3D technology.


Active 3D is better in terms of quality, as the glasses use LCD screens in the lenses. This also means that the glasses are both cumbersome and need to be charged. Throw in the fact that some 3D TV sets don't include glasses, and if you're a big family, or have movie/game nights, you'll need to shell out for more glasses, and they aren't cheap. Another minus point for Active 3D is the limited position you have to gain the 3D effect -- limited as in you need to be pretty much centred and sat straight.


Passive 3D, on the other hand, allows for much wider viewing angles, and the glasses are much cheaper (you could even "borrow" the ones from your local cinema -cough-), and LG kindly throw in 7 pairs of the things with the 47LW540U. But is LG's Cinema 3D range any good?

With the 47LW540U, you get a very impressive set of specs from a pretty reasonably priced TV:

Screen size (in.) - 47
Display Type  -   LED
Full HD (1080p) - Yes
Resolution  - 1920 x 1080
3D TV  - Yes
Cinema 3D  - Yes
Contrast Ratio - 7,000,000:1
Motion Clarity Index - 400Hz
WCC (Wide Color Control) - Yes
LED Blocks  - 16 Blocks
Local Dimming  - Yes

Intelligent Sensor Yes
1080P Source Input HDMI 60p/50p/30p/24p
Component 60p/50pA/V
Input Navigation / EZ Input Toggle Yes
Input Labeling Yes
Key Lock Yes

Picture quality is fantastic, watching Sky HD is truly a brilliant sight, but gaming is where the 47LW540U shines for me. Uncharted 3 looked phenomenal, and in 3D it looked staggering. Whilst the 3D wasn't over the top, bullets that flew past as Drake hid behind a wall and bits of debris that blew around was just a brilliant experience. Crysis 2 was just as good, with the Nano Suit HUD looking horribly real, as did the fantastic water effects, but Child of Eden proved to be the best game I've played in 3D. To be honest, I wasn't a big fan of Child of Eden in the review, but once you play it in 3D it's a totally different game. It looks phenomenal. A real mind blowing experience -- the music, the colours; it was made to be played in 3D.

Video spec wise, the 47LW540U brings in 
the following specs: XD Engine, Aspect Ratio Correction (8 Modes 16:9/Just Scan/Original/Full Wide/4:3/14:9/Zoom/Cinema Zoom, Color Temperature, Just Scan, Real Cinema 24p (24p 5:5/2:2 Pull down), Expert Mode/ ISF Ready, Eye Care (Anti Dazzling), Fresh White, xvyCC, AV Mode (Cinema / Sport / Game), Picture Mode (Intelligent sensor, Vivid, Standard, Cinema, Sport, Game, isf Expert1, isf Expert2), Picture Wizard and Enhanced Noise Reduction.

Whilst audio is a follows: Mono/Stereo/Dual (MTS/SAP), Audio Output (10W + 10W), Dolby Digital Decoder, Surround System (Infinite Surround), Bass/Treble/Balance, Smart Volume Leveler (Auto Volume Leveler)and Clear Voice.

The only Blu-Ray I've actually watched on the 47LW540U up to now was Juno, and that was what my girlfriend put on, but even still, the 1080p picture on the 1920 x 1080 resolution screen looked great, even for an indie/teen/chick flick movie. 

2D content looks great, even SD channels still look impressive. But the 47LW540U has another trick, with the ability to convert any 2D image into 3D. To be honest, it doesn't add a great deal, we tried it with Scrubs to not much effect, but the F1 did look respectable, but I can't really see the function used a great deal.

Aesthetics wise, whilst not the most innovitive design, the 47LW540U is still a good looking set. And it's slim too, coming in at just 1089 x 647 x 59mm (or 1089 x 711 x 268mm if you use the stand) and weighing just 17.85kg (or 21.05kg if you use the stand) it's no beef eater, whilst across the bottom of the set is just the LG logo, and some touch sensitive buttons.

Jack wise, you have HDMI/HDCP Input x3, USB 2.0 (for JPEG, mp3, MPEG-4/DivX, Service),Headphone Out CI slot, RF In, AV In, Full Scart, Component in (Y,Pb,Pr) + Audio, Digital Audio Out (Coaxial/ Optical), RGB In, D-sub 15pin, PC Audio Input, and RS-232C (Control / SVC.

Overall, whilst I wouldn't urge everyone to go out and drop a thousand pounds on a 3D TV (although the 47LW540U can be found for around £800 now), the LG 47LW540U Cinema 3D TV is a fantastic 3D TV, with tons of features, brilliant display and sound, and as it's Passive 3D technology (or Cinema 3D as LG is calling it) the glasses are cheap enough to keep an entire cupboard full of them for all your friends and family.

It sits proudly on the wall in my lounge, and it's by far my TV of choice, and as such, makes it's mark as Tech Beever's TV 2011.

Feature: The Problem With 3D

The Problem With 3D
By Callum Povey



3D is awesome, apparently, yet it's also one of the lesser successful gambles of the last two years (although it's been failing for many more). You see, my problem with 3D, is that it's an expensive investment for something that isn't quite there yet.



Don't get me wrong, the idea of playing Uncharted 3 in stereoscopic 3D is very exciting, but I'm of the impression wearing big, clunky 3D specs will ruin the immersivene nature I want.
Obviously, there are ways around this, more expensive light-weight glasses may help, but again, that's more money.

3D tv's aren't cheap, but if I'm seeing 3D images, I don't want the sides of my tv ruining the show. But, again, I can't afford a 60+ inch 3D tv.

Woah! It's Coming Right At Me! Oh, No It Isn't...
You could say, "well, get a HD 3D projector, producing pictures upto 108-inch or so", but again, very expensive. And add to that, some projectors don't accept the PS3 as 3D.

Then there's glasses free 3D, like the Nintendo 3DS. Great, I don't have to wear glasses, but I also cannot move for fear of the 3DS losing the 3D image it's producing, plus I'm told by Nintendo not to play for more than 30 minutes.

No Glasses Also Means No Sales...





With companies like Sky and Virgin offering 3D movies, Sony cleverly making the PS3 3D enabled (then releasing the update alongside it's own brand of 3D TV's), it's pretty clear that 3D is something that will soon become as standard as HD, and the quality will have risen dramatically.
But if Toshiba's glasses free TVisn't selling in Japan, the land of tech, what makes them think it'll succeed in the western side of the world?
I'm one of many, who wants to embrace 3D, but the quality and price is something to be desired.


LG Optimus Pad [hands on video]

LG Optimus Pad
(image via Engadget)
The folks over at Engadget have been lucky enough to play around with the LG Optimus Pad (known as the G-Slate in the US). The 8.9-inch, 3D friendly tablet, runs Android Honeycomb  and rocks a duel-core CPU and duel-camera array, which gives the processing power to produce 3D video. The Pad doesn't give you 'glasses free' 3D, but if you really must have the 'third dimension' on the move, you can arm yourself with a pair of glasses.

Hit the link [here] and head to Engadget for a video hands on, as well as some photos of the beast in action.

source: engadget




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Coming Up On Tech Beever




Coming up later today, we'll have some delicious shots and previews of the LG Opitmus Pad, Huawei S7 tablet, ViewSonic ViewPad 10Pro, LG Optimus 3D, Sony Ericsson Xperia Arc, Sony Ericsson Xperia Pro, updates on the BlackBerry 4G PlayBook, Motorola Xoom to name but a few things!
They'll also be some minor changes to the site, so keep your eyes peeled.
A new feature that will hopefully be implemented thus week, is the return of Top 5's, which I think will house it's own little segment somewhere...
Plus, well hopefully have the long awaited Blackberry Torch review...


Man discovers 3D in the blink of an eye...

Francois Vogel, a man who has found a way to revolutionise stereoscopic 3D visuals, and we mean, change it forever.  Is it genius? Is it bizzare? Watch the embedded clip below...





source: engadget

Eizo announces more detail on glasses-free 3D DuraVision LCD

Eizo released the first details of their glasses-free 3D tv two weeks ago, now wonder at its full specs and more details. The company has released a spec sheet confirming the 1920 x 1080 resolution and 23-inch size, also detailing how it works. The monitor uses a directional backlight and a time lag to effectively hit each eye individually through the same pixel, enabling that high resolution in a small panel but still delivering glasses-free performance. Eizo pledges no moirĂ©, color distortion, or other issues typically seen in glasses-free displays, but this tech will surely not come cheap when it ships in the second quarter of 2011. How do we know? Anticipated applications for the FDF2301-3D include scanning electron microscopes and semiconductor inspections -- playing Killzone 3 is sadly not listed *big sad eyes =(*
 




 
 
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