While glasses-free 3D gaming is a fairly big draw there is one extra 3D feature to Nintendo’s 3DS, the ability to take 3D photographs with the dual cameras. There are now hints that the 3DS could also capture 3D videos as well.
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Sharp, the maker of the no-glasses-required 3D display on the Nintendo 3DS, has announced that it will launch a smartphone globally with just such a display - and possibly even a 3D-recording camera - before the end of 2010.
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A report has found that 12 per cent of the UK population has a visual impairment that prevents them from seeing 3D images. This means that around 6 million Brits cannot watch films in 3D, play consoles in 3D, and even dare I say it… witness the 3DS’s full capabilities.
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First, it's worth bearing in mind how 3D technology works in general. If you hold one finger up in front of you then look at it with your right eye closed. Now open your left and close your right- it looks like your finger moved, doesn't it? That's because your two eyes see two slightly different images in order to judge distance.
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