This tech seems dumb and flawed.
The biggest question I have is movement while playing. If I change direction or shift will I lose my image of the game? Would the computer be able to adjust quick enough?
I included a link to the video, it show just how quickly it changes and this is still early in the life of the thing. Also in the quotes I included it says the cameras "track the viewers so that it knows where to steer light toward them" so no, if you move you won't lose the image. Would the computer be able to adjust quick enough?? This is 2010!! How long has headtracking been around? Facial recognition? Does the Wii computer respond fast enough to the movement of the Wiimote??
Market analysts don't expect 3D TV's to sell well until 2013 so MS has some time to research and get this out. Again, if you read the article (impartially and not under the guise of "I hope everything Microsoft does fails") they mention how this technology has been around for awhile but MS is the first to do it in a way that is cost and size efficient. So LCD manufacturers already know about the tech, and it's pretty obvious how desperate they are to come out with glasses-free 3D televisions. Why wouldn't Visio or some other lazy company simply license MS's tech? MS isn't going to build TV's just give out the technology.
Everyone else would see a either a normal 2D display or a 3D display that requires glasses beyond the TV's split 3D or 2D imaging. It's still a TV screen, it's the camera's that are broadcasting the display of something not on the screen. The quote about the laptop (that I included in original post) mentions this. You can make it so that only 1, or how ever many people can see, or that everyone can, it doesn't say both are possible, but they should be. As you it would only require one more stationary simple camera.
And if MS has no place in the living room there are 25 million Xbox360 that need to be returned.
I wonder how different the reaction would be if this thread was labeled: 3DS Glasses-Free Tech Revealed I imagine there would have been a lot of pontification directed at Nintendo.