Sometime on Feb 16, RB cobbled together some glyphs to say:
monitor being shared by two adjacent operators, each wearing polarised glasses to see only their own screen? This would bring down the cost of monitors in large companies by half.
And increase medical expenses for strained necks :)
Or a giant "Drive-in" kinda screen with all the ppl in their cars with keyboards :). Imagination surely at work here
Sometime Today, PGRGE cobbled together some glyphs to say:
Or a giant "Drive-in" kinda screen with all the ppl in their cars with keyboards :). Imagination surely at work here
Please fix your line length.
With polarised light you can have only two. Horizontally polarised light and vertically polarised.
Pillai, Gishu R (GE Energy) wrote:
Or a giant "Drive-in" kinda screen with all the ppl in their cars with keyboards :).
Imagination surely at work here
Many years ago when cell phones did not come to India, I had suggested to my father, that to avoid malpractice of manual meter readings in electricity distribution, there should be sealed meters that radio transmitt the reading to a receiving station which stores all the records. That way, if anyone is bypassing a meter with a short, it would get detected. Sometime back I read in the papers and on the net that Reliance is planning to use its mobile network to tramsmitt meter readings to its servers for automated recording.
Many of you guys are highly educated and with your knowledge, I felt, maybe you can think of something in the right direction. Anyway, sorry for any disturbance caused.
Regards,
Rony.
Pillai, Gishu R (GE Energy) wrote:
Or a giant "Drive-in" kinda screen with all the ppl in their cars with keyboards :). Imagination surely at work here
Dear Gishu,
On second thoughts, you have unknowingly given an idea for the future multiplex cinemas.
What is needed is a high power projection system that will project video images on a large screen at a very high frame rate. A matrix of smaller projectors can also be used. In this higher frame rate, 5 to 10 movies could be interlaced together. The viewer wears a special pair LCD specs that act like a light shutter, 'open' when the LCD crystals are dispersed and 'shut' or black when the crystals are polarised. The electronic shutters will be synchronised with the set of interlaced images that the user selects. So each viewer sees only his/her selected movie. The audio will be through surround effect headphones, so independent audio channels are available in the same hall. Wireless technology means no wiring needed for each chair.
This will be a great boon for existing single hall cinemas who want to convert to multiplexes without having to tear down their existing structure.
Regards,
Rony.