3D Radar - 3D news and reviews

Hands on: Toshiba Qosmio F750 3D review

You have to be extremely quick to bag a world's first in the technology industry. No sooner had Asus announced what it thought was the world's first glasses-free 3D laptop, the G53SX, Toshiba also announce its – with the hook being that it will actually be out before Asus' effort.

The Qosmio F750 3D laptop offers up 3D without glasses and it primarily aimed at movie buffs and gamers.

Toshiba showed off the laptop to a select few technology journalists in London this week, and hailed it as "the evolution of 3D".

Toshiba f750 3d

Toshiba is not stranger to glasses-free 3D. It has released the first TV panel of its type on the market in Japan, the Regza 20GL1, which offers nine different points from where you can view the image from. While this is far from perfect, it is a big and bold step in the direction 3D has to go if it is to ever go truly mainstream.

The Qosmio F750 3D does things differently. It uses a lenticular lens sheet as a panel and this is how it can offer the 3D without glasses.

Toshiba f750 3d

The real hook, though, is that it uses the webcam on the laptop to track your eyes, so wherever your eyes go, the 3D image is meant to follow. This technology was seen in a demo at CES 2011.

In our tests with the Qosmio F750 3D – and bearing in mind this was a pre-production model – the tracking seemed to work pretty well but there are a few caveats to using the laptop.

As the 3D tracks your eyes and your eyes only, this is a one-person affair. Given that the screen is 15.6 inches, you wouldn't exactly have many bodies crowded round the thing, but it is worth bearing in mind that this 3D is for just one person.

Toshiba f750 3d

When we tried out the laptop, we were shown two types of media: a still 3D image of some flowers and a 2D-3D version of a DVD. The picture offered the best 3D illusion. Colours were vibrant and the image definitely 'popped' from the screen.

The converted footage wasn't quite as impressive. Although we were impressed with the lack of judder – the laptop has a 120Hz refresh rate to minimise this – the 3D effect felt a touch shallow. As this is a pre-production model we can't say if this is what you will see when shop bought but it was in keeping with most converted 3D footage we have seen.

Toshiba f750 3d

The eye-tracking on the webcam, does work well though. This technology was introduced earlier in the year with the company's television range.

It is worth noting that while Toshiba has added a 3D Blu-ray drive to the Qosmio F750 3D, so if you don't want to watch 3D content glasses-free on your own, you can pipe the 3D Blu-ray footage through the laptop's HDMI slot on to a big-screen TV.

Drifting away from the 3D capabilities of the laptop, there are a number of powerful features.

These include: an: Intel Core i7 processor, Nvidia GeForce GT 540M graphics, 6GB RAM, 640GB hard-disk drive, Harman Kardon stereo speakers and Dolby Advanced Audio.

Toshiba f750 3d

All of this is coupled with 4x USB drives (one USB 3.0), Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 3.0 and HDMI.

Another key feature is the Qosmio F750 3D's Blu-ray XL drive. This is definitely one for the storage nuts, as it allows you to write content to the most capacious of Blu-ray recordable discs.

Toshiba has also made some tweaks with the 3D technology so you will be able to work on 2D documents, while also watching 3D content. This may sound like it is enough for your eyes to turn against you but the idea you can work with 2D and 3D content is certainly an intriguing one.

The Qosmio F750 3D UK release date is August, with pricing to be around the £1,300 mark.

Most read this month
  • This week's hottest reviews on TechRadar

    HTC's 'One' range of Android smartphones represents the company's great hope of a 2012 financial comeback, and we've now reviewed all three models.

    The HTC One V is the most affordable of the three, and you should check out our review if you're looking for a premium handset for a reasonable price.

    Elsewhere it's been another exciting week in the world of cameras so do check out our cameras channel.

    HTC One V review  read more »

  • Review Roundup: This week's hottest reviews on TechRadar

    There's a reason why Apple is suing Samsung in just about every major world territory - it feels threatened, and so it might.

    Samsung is now the top-selling phone manufacturer on the planet, and that's entirely thanks to the wildly popular Galaxy range of Android smartphones. The latest such handset, the Galaxy S3, has enjoyed the kind of build-up and reception normally reserved for iDevices and that's no mean feat.

    The stats don't lie, either - over half a million people read our hands-on in just 12 hours!  read more »