Re: 3D Glasses
Another use of 3D was a short lived console from Nintendo where you inserted your head into something resembling a diving mask on a tripod. By all accounts this was sure to give the user neck and back strain along with eye & head ache.
One 3d system which didn't need glasses was the Cine 2000 at Alton Towers, which used a dome shaped screen on a ceiling.
Many years ago my Dad & uncle were walking past this & noticed someone walking out of it while resisting the urge to make a pavement pizza, & both though they must see what was inside.
By the early 1990s it had been replaced by a system using clear frosted glasses, also used a Granada Studios.
I've seem a similar system to Cine 2000 at the theme park near the Needles, which was hard to stand up while watching it.
Another use of 3D was a short lived console from Nintendo where you inserted your head into something resembling a diving mask on a tripod. By all accounts this was sure to give the user neck and back strain along with eye & head ache.
One 3d system which didn't need glasses was the Cine 2000 at Alton Towers, which used a dome shaped screen on a ceiling.
Many years ago my Dad & uncle were walking past this & noticed someone walking out of it while resisting the urge to make a pavement pizza, & both though they must see what was inside.
By the early 1990s it had been replaced by a system using clear frosted glasses, also used a Granada Studios.
I've seem a similar system to Cine 2000 at the theme park near the Needles, which was hard to stand up while watching it.
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