Why is it nobody remembers the company I/O Systems? They had the IOglasses back in the mid-early 90's. They had several models. Ones for just TV, ones for 3D TV, ones that plugged into a PC, ones for stereoscopic 3D on a PC, and even had a head-tracking kit. I remember playing with them in Fry's Electronics as a teen. Granted they were a bit larger, and just as fugly, and cost a tad bit more than these do for the high end models. With today's electronics they could have made them smaller and deal with higher resolutions quite easily.
The Galaxy Tab 10.1, much like its Limited Edition sibling that we reviewed last month, is ever-so-slightly thinner than the iPad 2, a slate that most sane individuals (and competitors, for that matter) would confess is the market leader today.
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Why is it nobody remembers the company I/O Systems? They had the IOglasses back in the mid-early 90's. They had several models. Ones for just TV, ones for 3D TV, ones that plugged into a PC, ones for stereoscopic 3D on a PC, and even had a head-tracking kit. I remember playing with them in Fry's Electronics as a teen. Granted they were a bit larger, and just as fugly, and cost a tad bit more than these do for the high end models. With today's electronics they could have made them smaller and deal with higher resolutions quite easily.
Where, pray tell, is the innovation in this?