kryogen wrote: » Anyone know of any pubs in the town with 3D capabilities? Sky are launching there sky 3D for the United/Chelsea game at the weekend so there would be plenty of custom for anyone who does i reckon!
seanybiker wrote: » 3 quid deposit on the glasses in norris' I think.
kryogen wrote: » you a norris' head??
honeybadger wrote: » will the storm samuel l jackson pulp fiction style glasses work for the 3d for the games ?:)
seanybiker wrote: » give em a shot sure. Remember years ago we used them paper glasses with one red and one green eye lol.
burkey85 wrote: » I am, surprised there gettin it in, Won't be goin to watch the match though, its on too early. You'd end up spending the whole day there:D
ziedth wrote: » ^^ bad thing?
Tellox wrote: » looking like a tool.
seanybiker wrote: » change your head ? surely isnt any way they do it a way of tricking your brain to perceive it in 3D as the people are not in the room playing the game. dont see the big problem with 2D. Saying that when I had over 300 video's I couldnt see DVD's taking off either.
Tellox wrote: » Oi, my head is gorgeous. But really; http://www.justeyewear.com/blog/technology/the-dangers-of-3d/ I have to constantly take mine off for a few seconds every now and then when watching a 3d movie, always wind up with minor headaches too
Tellox wrote: » Sorry to sidetrack the thread a bit, but does anyone have any idea on what kind of tech the 3d tv's are using? If it's the same as the cinemas (i.e: avatar-style), I'd avoid them like the plague. Those glasses work by basically tricking your brain into falsely perceiving depth - while a film every now and then won't really do any lasting damage, sitting down watching 3d TV all day will quite literally wreck your depth perception. Also, they just wreck my head. Migraines + looking like a tool.