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Saturday, 01 January 2000

  • Janet Test

    Sun Jan 10, 2:48 AM ET
    Previous 7 of 13 Next

    A 3-D camera by Fujifilm, bottom, is shown next to 3-D glasses, top, at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Friday, Jan. 8, 2010. The big push from TV makers this year is for sets that show 3-D in the home. Fujifilm is betting that people will want to shoot their own 3-D movies and photos as well, and is selling a digital camera with two lenses, set apart as if they were human eyes. The screen on the back of the Finepix Real 3D W1 presents, if you squint a little bit, a 3-D image using a glasses-free technology similar to the old 3-D postcards. It costs $599 from fujifilm.com and can be paired with a 3-D photo frame for $499.

    (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)
  • Janet Test

    Sun Jan 10, 2:48 AM ET
    Previous 7 of 13 Next

    A 3-D camera by Fujifilm, bottom, is shown next to 3-D glasses, top, at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Friday, Jan. 8, 2010. The big push from TV makers this year is for sets that show 3-D in the home. Fujifilm is betting that people will want to shoot their own 3-D movies and photos as well, and is selling a digital camera with two lenses, set apart as if they were human eyes. The screen on the back of the Finepix Real 3D W1 presents, if you squint a little bit, a 3-D image using a glasses-free technology similar to the old 3-D postcards. It costs $599 from fujifilm.com and can be paired with a 3-D photo frame for $499.

    (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)
  • Janet Test

    Sun Jan 10, 2:48 AM ET
    Previous 7 of 13 Next

    A 3-D camera by Fujifilm, bottom, is shown next to 3-D glasses, top, at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Friday, Jan. 8, 2010. The big push from TV makers this year is for sets that show 3-D in the home. Fujifilm is betting that people will want to shoot their own 3-D movies and photos as well, and is selling a digital camera with two lenses, set apart as if they were human eyes. The screen on the back of the Finepix Real 3D W1 presents, if you squint a little bit, a 3-D image using a glasses-free technology similar to the old 3-D postcards. It costs $599 from fujifilm.com and can be paired with a 3-D photo frame for $499.

    (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)
  • Janet Test

    Sun Jan 10, 2:48 AM ET
    Previous 7 of 13 Next

    A 3-D camera by Fujifilm, bottom, is shown next to 3-D glasses, top, at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Friday, Jan. 8, 2010. The big push from TV makers this year is for sets that show 3-D in the home. Fujifilm is betting that people will want to shoot their own 3-D movies and photos as well, and is selling a digital camera with two lenses, set apart as if they were human eyes. The screen on the back of the Finepix Real 3D W1 presents, if you squint a little bit, a 3-D image using a glasses-free technology similar to the old 3-D postcards. It costs $599 from fujifilm.com and can be paired with a 3-D photo frame for $499.

    (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)

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