If they can overcome the whole red/blue lens thing for 3D on TV, I'd go for it. But the 3D on the "Journey to the Center of the Earth" Blu-ray is horrid with a dark magenta lens and a dark green lens! The brain has a terrible time adjusting to those colors as the image phases from magenta to green to full color to magenta, etc. It's truly nauseating (and the movie isn't that good either)! And you have to bump up the brightness on your TV in order to see through those murky glasses. If that is the future of 3D on TV, then count me out!
"I'm moving to a small studio and for some reason the cable connection is in an awkward place and I need a way to transmit HD quality video and audio no more than 20 feet away. What is the best wireless HDMI transmitter / receiver for this situation? Thanks!"
The most commented posts on Engadget over the past 24 hours.
Now that we've thrown 'em off the trail, use the form below to get in touch with the people at Engadget. Please fill in all of the required fields because they're required.
If they can overcome the whole red/blue lens thing for 3D on TV, I'd go for it. But the 3D on the "Journey to the Center of the Earth" Blu-ray is horrid with a dark magenta lens and a dark green lens! The brain has a terrible time adjusting to those colors as the image phases from magenta to green to full color to magenta, etc. It's truly nauseating (and the movie isn't that good either)! And you have to bump up the brightness on your TV in order to see through those murky glasses. If that is the future of 3D on TV, then count me out!