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Techy Cutie Pony Collection!

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Description

Dubs decides what I name the lego pone.
 
[prototype because I don’t have enough pieces to make a continuous color scheme.]

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Comments

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flutterbattyshy

@bAv_DB  
It usually just makes my eyes water (I sit like two rows from the screen when I go) so I take them off.
 
I’ve never noticed it being 3D. Just sort of blurry and eye watering.
Background Pony #88E4
@bAv_DB  
Some people have abnormalities in their eyes or brain which reduces the effectiveness of 3D displays. Admittedly it’s quite rare, but it exists.
Background Pony #88E4
@Amethyst Star  
Computer images are stored as 3 different colour channels - red, green and blue. This is similar to how the human eye views images. If you look very closely at your monitor you might be able to see the individual red, green and blue lights which make it up.
 
Humans can see things in 3D because your two eyes observe the same scene from slightly different angles. The difference between the images observed by your eyes tell you how close objects are.
 
This can be “faked” by showing two different images to your eyes. This is the concept behind all 3D displays. Take two camera images from different places, show one image to each eye, then your brain will see depth as if your eyes were where the two cameras were.
 
A popular way to show a different image to each eye is with colour filters. You put a red filter in front of your left eye so it can only see the red parts of the image, and you put a blue filter over your right eye so it sees the blue parts. This lets a single image appear 3D when viewed using coloured 3D glasses. Unfortunately, when viewed without the glasses both eyes see both images so the colours look wrong.
 
Read the wikipedia article for more info.
Background Pony #88E4
@Evelgrivion  
>#comment_522bbe52a4c72d2d570002aa
 
If we’re going by comment ID, then those are dubs. Your pony is now called “…I don’t see the pony in this.”
Background Pony #88E4
@Amethyst Star  
It’s a 3D anaglyph. Basically the red channel is taken from a camera on the left while the green and blue channels are from a camera on the right. If you wear coloured 3D glasses then you will be able to see it as a 3D image.
 
In future though OP, I would suggest creating a cross-eye 3D stereogram instead (or both). They don’t require any extra equipment to view, and no information is lost in the process. It is easy to convert from a stereogram image to an anaglyph, but the reverse is very difficult.