ABSTRACT
Since the seminal SketchPad work of Sutherland [1964], direct interaction with a computer has been compelling: we can directly touch, move, and change what we see. Direct interaction is a major contribution to the success of smartphones and tablets; yet, the world is not flat. While existing technologies can display realistic multi-view stereoscopic 3D content reasonably well [Lueder 2012], interaction within the same 3D space often requires extensive additional hardware. We present a cheap and easy system that uses the same lenslet array for both multi-view autostereoscopic display and 3D light-pen position sensing.
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- Lueder, E. 2012. 3D Displays. Wiley.Google Scholar
- Sutherland, I. E. 1964. Sketchpad: A man-machine graphical communication system. In Proceedings of the SHARE design automation workshop, DAC '64. Google Scholar
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