I have been doing some research about the different methods of displaying 3D content, and need a little clarification. The way I understand it is that screens that require shutter glasses use a page-flipping method at a high framerate. So, if the screen was paused at any frame, it would be a full 2D image (either left or right eye). I also assume this is how DLP HDTV's work as they use shutter glasses, but am unsure. So, how do displays such as these show 3D still images like a picture?
I was also confused about row-interleaving. I understood that these displays (passive) only require polarized glasses because they display both images at once, but with different polarization. Is this what row-interleaving is? If so, does this cut the horizontal resolution in half?
Thanks for the help
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