What is stereoscopy?
Image credit: dynamicscience.com.au |
Have you ever watched a 3D movie with monsters leaping out of the screen or birds flying around you and have you ever wondered how they create that realistic image???
Stereoscopy is the art if bringing images projected on a flat screen to a 3-Dimension and make you feel as you are the part of the experience. It is q technique for creating or enhancing the illusion of depth in an image by means of stereopsis for binocular vision. It works on the basic principle of the different perspectives seen by our eyes.
Stereoscopy helps in our incredible brain in automatically perceiving depth and seeing the film in 3D. Any stereoscopic image is called as a stereo gram. Most stereoscopic methods present 2 offsets separately to the right and left eye. These 2D images are then combined in the brain to give the perception of 3D depth.
This technique is distinguished from 3D displays that displays an image in three full dimensions, allowing the observer to increase information about the three dimensional objects being displayed by head and eye movements.
So it's that easy peasy...
Posts before October 2021 have been marked as "Old Posts". Less likely, but they might have out dated or incorrect information, ugly looking bits of code, no labels, etc. Don't get me wrong, many of these posts are top-notch and interesting too.
I thought it would be better not to delete or revamp these posts, even if they suck. The bitter truth is that old works always suck, but I take that as a positive tool to convey that I am growing. Besides there's no better way to showcase my journey without these old, messy, poorly written posts!
I thought it would be better not to delete or revamp these posts, even if they suck. The bitter truth is that old works always suck, but I take that as a positive tool to convey that I am growing. Besides there's no better way to showcase my journey without these old, messy, poorly written posts!
Old Post