Anyone else planning on watching the game tonight in 3-d??

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And if the Road Warrior says it, it must be true..
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Game hits another dimension

Fans can watch BCS title clash in 3-D at local theater

By DAVID BARRON Copyright 2009 Houston Chronicle

Jan. 8, 2009, 12:03AM


Oklahoma and Florida fans can follow their teams’ pursuit of the BCS national championship from a new dimension at a Houston theater tonight.

Rave Motion Pictures’ Rave Yorktown, 15900 Yorktown Crossing Blvd., is one of 35 theaters nationwide airing a 3-D broadcast of the Sooners-Gators game, the latest attempt by sports leagues, TV networks and technology companies to take sports beyond HDTV.

Tickets are $25 each — special plastic 3-D glasses are included — and about half of the 300 seats at the theater, which is equipped with a 30-foot screen, had been sold as of Wednesday.

3Ality Digital of Burbank, Calif., will use eight Sony 3-D cameras to shoot the game. The 3-D feed will be mixed with sound from the Fox Sports broadcast crew and piped by satellite to theaters.

“I started this company because the thing I wanted to watch the most was a broadcast of the Super Bowl in 3-D,” said Steve Schklair, founder and CEO of 3Ality Digital Systems.

“Sports is about geography to a point, with the players moving in space, and nothing can show that better than 3-D.”

Along with new technology, viewers will see tonight’s game from a new perspective. While traditional football broadcasts use a high camera mounted at midfield to show plays as they unfold, Schklair said 3-D images are most effective when the objects are moving toward the camera.

Accordingly, 3Ality will have two cameras in the stands and six closer to the field. Cameramen will shoot each play from either the end zone or from a high camera mounted at a 45-degree angle to the play rather than the straight-ahead shots used by traditional broadcasts, and cameras closer to the field will be used for replay shots.




Each 3-D camera position has two cameras, focused by the cameraman through a single viewfinder. 3Ality’s technology combines data from the two lenses — one for the left eye, one for the right — into a single HD picture that can be processed by a standard TV production truck. It then sends the signal to the theaters, where a decoder splits the signal into left eye and right eye images.




























3Ality first tested its 3-D techniques at Super Bowl XXXVIII in Houston in 2004. Turner Sports will beam its NBA All-Star Saturday Night to the Rave Yorktown and other theaters next month.


Schklair is optimistic tonight’s broadcast will be glitch-free.


“We have it down now,” he said. “That’s not to say everything is perfect yet. But when you watch a game in 3-D and everything works, which is almost all the time, it’s unbelievable, absolutely amazing.”
 

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Movie theatre = no beer = terrible place to watch a game like this. They have been doing this at my theatre for Leaf games and it's not worth it at all.

EDIT: I am looking forward to that Valentine horror 3D movie however
 

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