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A satisfying and effective three-dimensional image will happen.<ref name="t098">{{cite web | last=Dormehl | first=Luke | title=Feast Your Eyes on This Giant, Room-Sized Hologram Generator | website=Digital Trends | date=2021-04-01 | url=https://www.digitaltrends.com/computing/3d-volumetric-display-led-pulse/ | access-date=2024-10-01}}</ref>
A satisfying and effective three-dimensional image will happen.<ref name="t098">{{cite web | last=Dormehl | first=Luke | title=Feast Your Eyes on This Giant, Room-Sized Hologram Generator | website=Digital Trends | date=2021-04-01 | url=https://www.digitaltrends.com/computing/3d-volumetric-display-led-pulse/ | access-date=2024-10-01}}</ref>
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==Two view==
A '''two-view 3D display''' is a kind of [[display]] that generates two separate viewing zones, one for each eye.<ref name="n106">{{cite journal | last=Holliman | first=Nicolas S. | last2=Dodgson | first2=Neil A. | last3=Favalora | first3=Gregg E. | last4=Pockett | first4=Lachlan | title=Three-Dimensional Displays: A Review and Applications Analysis | journal=IEEE Transactions on Broadcasting | volume=57 | issue=2 | date=2011 | issn=0018-9316 | doi=10.1109/TBC.2011.2130930 | pages=362–371}}</ref> The category includes simple handheld fixed-image stereoscopes, some types of [[head-mounted displays]], and some types of [[autostereoscopic head tracked display]].<ref name="n106"/>
A '''two-view 3D display''' is a kind of [[display]] that generates two separate viewing zones, one for each eye.<ref name="n106">{{cite journal | last=Holliman | first=Nicolas S. | last2=Dodgson | first2=Neil A. | last3=Favalora | first3=Gregg E. | last4=Pockett | first4=Lachlan | title=Three-Dimensional Displays: A Review and Applications Analysis | journal=IEEE Transactions on Broadcasting | volume=57 | issue=2 | date=2011 | issn=0018-9316 | doi=10.1109/TBC.2011.2130930 | pages=362–371}}</ref> The category includes simple handheld fixed-image stereoscopes, some types of [[head-mounted displays]], and some types of [[autostereoscopic head tracked display]].<ref name="n106"/>
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==Autostereoscopic==
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An '''autostereoscopic display''' is a type of stereoscopic 3D display that works with free eyes in the air. It is the display at a distance, and the viewer's eyes, and it looks 3D. "Autostereoscopic" literally means self-solid-view, meaning it itself shows something that looks solid to the viewer. Typically, it is a [[flat-focus binocular autostereoscopic display]]. Autostereoscopic displays based on parallax barrier and lenticular methodologies have been known for about 100 years.<ref name="o616">{{cite web | title=On aspects of glasses-free 3D cinema 70 years ago | publisher=Veritas et Visus | date=2013-12-01 | url=https://openrepository.aut.ac.nz/items/a35ec24a-d314-4d6c-a8cd-87ffdc853f7a | access-date=2024-10-06}}</ref>
==References==
==References==