Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Acer debuts 3-D laptop for gaming, movies

Users can turn special effect on and off PC with 15.6-inch screen

Image: Acer 3-D laptop
Acer's 3-D laptop comes with special software for three-dimensional effects for movies. Most games will display in 3-D, even though they're designed for regular screens.
Acer
  Tech Holiday Gift Guide  
  More
Holiday Retail
10 cool gifts for the geeky kids on your list
For the geek parent or the geek child, there’s no lack of holiday goodies from which to choose, with some under-$100 options including a Batman laptop, Lego digital camera and more.

  Real Women’s Guide to Technology

An MSN special that focuses on consumer technologies that can benefit women.

Tech and gadgets videos
Image:
AP
'New Super Mario Bros. Wii' review
The Mario brothers are back and they’ve got a few new tricks up their sleeves. Msnbc.com's video game reporter Todd Kenreck reviews this Nintendo classic.

Video
Tech Watch
The latest in technology and entertainment news.
  Auto Tech

A better economy may lure buyers, but these trends could seal the deal.

Go to Auto Tech

By Peter Svensson
updated 6:14 p.m. ET Oct. 21, 2009

NEW YORK - With the launch of Windows 7 this week, PC makers are trying some new things, including laptops with touch screens. Acer Inc. is going further — introducing a laptop with a 3-D screen.

The abstrusely named Acer Aspire 5738DG-6165 has a 15.6-inch screen that, with the help of special glasses, appears to take on depth if used with the right games or movies.

It's not the first laptop with a 3-D screen. Sharp introduced one in 2003. It worked without glasses, but the viewer had to be somewhat careful to keep his head in the right place for the 3-D effect to work. The screen worked similarly to 3-D postcards — the kind with the ribbed plastic layer — but looked more convincing. Like Acer's model, the 3-D effect could be turned off with a button.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Sharp's model cost $3,300 and was aimed at engineers and other professionals who might be helped by being able to show objects in 3-D. Acer's laptop costs just $780, barely more than a comparable, normal laptop.

Windows 7 doesn't have special features for 3-D screens, so Acer will ship the computer with special movie player software. Finding movies to play on it won't be easy, however — there's no real consumer distribution system for the new 3-D movies that are shown in theaters, such as "Aliens vs. Monsters."

For computer games, it's another matter. Most games will display in 3-D, even though they're designed for regular screens.

On desktop computers, 3-D with glasses has been possible for years, if somewhat costly. Nvidia, a leading maker of graphics cards, sells a $200 3-D kit.

TV manufacturers are also excited about 3-D, and are trying to create discs and players that can bring 3-D movies into the living room.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Resource guide