In early 1990, DTI introduced the first PC-compatible autostereoscopic display product. This LCD based, flat panel, black and white VGA display, called the DTI 100M, was described at the 1990 SPIE conference. During 1990, the company began development of several new capabilities including: (1) a Macintosh-compatible version of its DTI 100M display. (2) a software toolkit for developers that includes a mouse-controlled 3-D cursor and the capability to combine two perspective views generated by many 3-D software packages into a single stereo view. (3) color autostereoscopic displays for its own product line, OEM products, and government contracts. (4) a time-multiplexed autostereoscopic system which allows the observer to see left and right eye images with full-display resolution.
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