![]() Unlike a parallax barrier, which has a small "sweet spot" where the 3D image is created, the lenses in Project Starline are used to send a different image to each eye, recreating 3D vision in a wholly natural way. That display is a custom 65-inch 8K panel with stereoscopic lenses, which at least have a passing similarity to the display found in a Nintendo 3DS, which uses a parallax barrier. The 3D-rendered recreation of the person sitting in the Project Starline booth enables Google to not only send a higher quality image than can be delivered via 2D video as you'd find on Zoom, Skype, or FaceTime, but it also grants the ability to move and rotate the 3D model to create the illusion of a three-dimensional person sitting in front of you. ![]() Essentially, a composite image is created using all of the pods' images combined into one big piece. Visual and audio information captured from these cameras is then rendered on a Lenovo P920 PC with four GPUs - that's two NVIDIA Quadro RTX 6000 GPU and two NVIDIA GeForce Titan RTX GPUs - then sent over the internet via WebRTC. ![]()
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