You are still tricking your mind into beliving the image it is seeing is actualy 3d, all it is doing is sending one flat image to one eye and another to the other eye. The image from your monitor is still flat, it just renders two different angles and shows one to one eye and the other to the other eye.
So it still isn't truly 3d.
It's also a very cheap trick that doesn't work to well for some people.
After reading some reviews, I'm not sure I'd want one.
Then again, it might be realy cool if it works for me.
Edit: @ Redquad
I already know how the eyes pick up an image, if you hadn't got that from the way I described the system.
Edit2:
For motion blur to work correctly you need the rendering system to "bleed" the pixels in the direction of the blur. If you can anti-alias you can get a good blur, it just uses to much processing power to do at the moment.
So it still isn't truly 3d.
It's also a very cheap trick that doesn't work to well for some people.
After reading some reviews, I'm not sure I'd want one.
Then again, it might be realy cool if it works for me.
Edit: @ Redquad
I already know how the eyes pick up an image, if you hadn't got that from the way I described the system.
Edit2:
For motion blur to work correctly you need the rendering system to "bleed" the pixels in the direction of the blur. If you can anti-alias you can get a good blur, it just uses to much processing power to do at the moment.