MasterImage and its parallax barrier 3D technology have been around for a while . Though nothing major — excepting the Hitachi H001 in Japan — has ever come of this company’s efforts, it’s back at Computex this year with a trio of reference display, showing off glasses-free 3D at 4.3-inch, 7-inch and 10-inch form factors. Resolution on both the 7- and 4.3-inch panels is 800 x 480 at the moment, but there’s a 1280 x 800 7-incher in the works that could be ready for production by the end of this year. The parallax barrier allowing for the autostereoscopic effect to happen adds only 1mm to the screen’s thickness, though it does halve vertical resolution — meaning an 800 x 480 screen will only show a 400 x 480 image when flipped to 3D mode. MasterImage builds the LCDs and controllers in these 3D imagers and is currently in discussions with what we’re told are “first tier” manufacturers of both smartphones and tablets. You can see the 7-inch display on video after the break — we found it able to match the 3D effect produced by displays requiring glasses, which is a good thing in relative terms, but as you see above, the two frames can and do get split up if you’re not perfectly positioned to soak up the third dimension. Gallery: MasterImage 7-inch glasses-free 3D display eyes-on at Computex 2011 Continue reading MasterImage touts 4.3-, 7- and 10-inch glasses-free 3D displays, interest from ‘first tier’ device makers MasterImage touts 4.3-, 7- and 10-inch glasses-free 3D displays, interest from ‘first tier’ device makers originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 05 Jun 2011 17:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Pucker up, Eminem fans: the Chrysler spokesman just dropped “A Kiss” with his Bad Meets Evil partner-in-rhyme Royce da 5′9″, and we are shocked — utterly shocked — that the “Die Hard” rapper has some unflattering things to say about one of his contemporaries on the tune. In fact, we think Lady Gaga is long … More » Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Idolator Discovery Date : 04/06/2011 21:42 Number of articles : 3
Continue reading …Jak szybko sprawdzić swój adres IP w przeglądarce Google Chrome? Minecraft: How to setup a non premium/free multiplayer server ! How to Check IP – What is My IP Address Show My IP Address Show My IP Check My Ip HotSearchNow says: maurice sendak arcade fire hanna gran torino brother red faction mystique ray charles what is my ip address john… http://www.nahub.com
Continue reading …America is the modern Babylon? So we are being punished by God for our sins… so says the radical racist Nutjob Louis Farrakhan. Hat Tip The Blaze . Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : P/Oed Patriot Discovery Date : 05/06/2011 18:51 Number of articles : 3
Continue reading …A Connecticut teen who was briefly barred from prom for his over-the-top invitation to his date finally got to go. (June 5)
Continue reading …Click here to view this media (h/t Dave at VideoCafe) Decade after decade, year after year, month after month, week after week, day after day, hour after hour we hear Republicans channelling Grover Norquist and claiming that taxes are too high, we must lower taxes for corporations and raising taxes is always forbidden. George Bush didn’t raise any taxes to finance his two wars and instead borrowed money from China to pay for them with not a whisper of complaint from deficit hawks while even going as far as keeping Iraq and Afghanistan out of his budgets and onto unprecedented emergency supplementals . The major talking point of the GOP is that we can’t raise taxes in a depression and we also have to cut spending. Some ConservaDems have adopted these ideas as well unfortunately. And even when taxes are as low as they have been under Obama’s administration , the media doesn’t report on it in any way that gets through to the American people. On FOX News Sunday, Bill Kristol broke the line from his GOP buddies and admitted that corporations have plenty of money and corporate tax rates aren’t hurting anyone. Kristol: Republicans are making a mistake if they focus on big businesses and corporate tax rates. Corporations have a ton of cash. The corporate tax rate is not killing big business in America. Wow, Kristol actually states the obvious which has been nearly impossible for Republicans to do because it breaks with the narrative that they have created ever since Obama took office even after Conservative policies trashed the global financial economy. Think Progress: Kristol is not right about much , but he is on the money here. Corporations are sitting on trillions in cash reserves and corporate profits have rebounded to record highs . In fact, “the Fortune 500 generated nearly $10.8 trillion in total revenues last year, up 10.5%. Total profits soared 81%. ” But none of that has translated into sustainable job growth. The only economic indicator that has been going up is CEO pay . Republicans are not only looking to cut the corporate tax rate, but they have been pushing to open a permanent tax loophole by switching to what’s known as a “territorial” corporate tax system, which would mean that corporations could permanently park money offshore and never pay taxes on it. The Republicans have also endorsed a misguided push to give corporations a tax windfall worth tens of billions of dollars through a tax repatriation holiday . Parking money to offshore accounts is something you see mafia-type gangs do to hide money from the government. Republicans have adopted the Vito Corleone Tax policy. Both parties have been talking up lowering the corporate tax rates so Digby asks the right question, why? Lowering corporate tax rates seems to be a given. The best we can hope for is that the two parties agree to close some loopholes and end some subsidies (at least until the lobbyists can get them re-instituted.) If Bill Kristol is suddenly antagonistic to this perfect bipartisan agreement I have to wonder why. Kristol is focusing on “regulatory matters’ which always has been a big problem. Kristol: Small business creates most of the jobs, that’s a regulatory matter, that’s a individual tax rate matter I think Kristol doesn’t define what constitutes a small business. With less regulations we’ll see more collapses throughout the system like we did with the mortgage scandal. Next time it’ll be the air we breath or the food we eat. But even if it’s not revealed why he said what he said, he helped kill a Republican tax myth. I can see this quote being used in ads as we move forward into election season against the GOP.
Continue reading …Shep Smith ended an interview abruptly after his guest revealed he had a big conflict of interest. Smith was discussing the recent hacking of Gmail, which Google has said likely came from China. His guest, an executive at security firm Symantec named Francis Desouza, began praising Google effusively for its handling of the matter. Smith cut in, asking if Desouza did business with Google. When Desouza said that he did, Smith ended the interview after just a minute-and-a-half. “Okay, that’s it. Thanks for coming on. Thank you very much,” Smith said. Watch the latest video at video.foxnews.com (H/T TVNewser)
Continue reading …Health authorities say locally grown beansprouts in northern Germany have been identified as the likely cause of an outbreak of E. coli that has killed almost 2 dozen and sickened hundreds in Europe. (June 5)
Continue reading …Health authorities say locally grown beansprouts in northern Germany have been identified as the likely cause of an outbreak of E. coli that has killed almost 2 dozen and sickened hundreds in Europe. (June 5)
Continue reading …Bloodiest weekend of uprising yet as Assad regime attempts to quell news by cutting off internet in major cities Syria has experienced one of its bloodiest weekends since the start of the uprising, with details emerging today of a violent crackdown on Friday despite the government’s attempt to stop news spreading by cutting off the internet in major cities. Across the country, an estimated 90 people were killed on Friday, with dozens more dying since. Residents of the western town of Jisr al-Shughourin said at least 35 people had been killed there since Saturday. The crackdown continued today, with activists reporting gunfire and tanks moving into the town of Khan Shikhon in the north-west province of Idlib. Rights groups say more than 1,200 people have died and at least 10,000 have been detained in Syria since March . Videos from Friday show what appears to be some of the biggest rallies yet, as well as graphic scenes of violence. One, purportedly taken from the roof of Al-Karak mosque in Deraa shows five men with their heads smashed lying in pools of blood. Another shows a man in plain-clothes firing on unarmed protesters in the city of Hama, where most of the people were killed on Friday; the city was calmer on Saturday, when thousands of people gathered for funerals, activists said. In 1982 in Hama, between 10,000 and 30,000 people were killed when Syria’s then president, Hafez al-Assad, father of the current president, Bashar al-Assad, ordered security forces to put down an Islamist uprising in the city. State media agency, Sana, reported that four policemen were killed by armed terrorist groups who attacked state buildings and police stations in Jisr al-Shughour. It did not mention a video posted online that purports to show Hama protesters hanging a man, apparently a security policeman found among mourners at a funeral on Saturday. Activists say the video has not been verified, but acknowledge that a small minority of protesters are fighting back. At least four children were among those killed at the weekend, the Local Co-ordinating Committees, a network of local opposition groups, said. Friday’s protests were called Freedom for Children Friday in memory of more than 72 children killed since the protests began in mid-March. Outrage has grown over the death of 13-year-old Hamza al-Khateeb, whose body was handed back to his parents last week with marks of severe torture. “We are all mothers of Hamza al-Khateeb” reads one of the banners held by women shown in a video of a sit-in at a private home. Meanwhile, rights groups say around 500 people have been released from prison under an amnesty announced last week as the government continues to claim it is making preparations for a national dialogue. Opposition members and analysts have said the moves are insincere, and do not go far enough. A gathering of opposition members last week in Turkey described Assad’s rule as unsustainable, given the brutality of the regime towards its citizens. A statement on Friday at the end of the four-day conference called on Assad to “resign immediately” and to hand authority to his vice-president “until the election of a transitional council”. The decision to cut the internet on Friday appears also to have backfired, irritating Syrians and drawing condemnation from the US. On Saturday, the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, said: “Syria must understand that attempting to silence its population can’t prevent the transition taking place.” However, despite growing criticism by western governments, they have stopped short of calling on Assad to step down. A draft UN security council resolution has yet to be put to the vote, with opposition coming from China and Russia. Syria Bashar Al-Assad Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Hillary Clinton Nidaa Hassan guardian.co.uk
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