The future of 3D TV and internet-connected TV

The future of 3D TV and internet-connected TV
Eisuke Tsuyuzaki is a key architect behind the 3D Blu-ray standard

As chief technology officer for Panasonic, Eisuke Tsuyuzaki has his finger on the pulse.

He's widely credited with creating a unified standard for 3D Blu-ray and has been a major evangelist for Blu-ray within Hollywood's creative community.

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While Tsuyuzaki admits that there has been a content shortage for 3D, he believes things are changing rapidly.

"Many of the big 3D Hollywood movies you've seen in theaters are now coming to PPV and VOD services, in addition to WWE (wrestling) and adult content. It's similar to those early HD TV offerings, but at a much faster rollout. With 3D now a feature on affordable video camcorders and digital still cameras, as well as video games and YouTube, the format will stop being just an added entertainment value and become an integral part of our social lives."

Connected futures

So what's the next significant development after 3D? Eisuke Tsuyuzaki is in no doubt that it's the proliferation of connected TVs and services.

"In my honest view, no one really knows how this will ultimately evolve," he confides, "although there are plenty of ambitions of global domination."

As people begin to connect their TVs to the internet in ever greater numbers, Panasonic's technologist predicts that the viewing experience will change beyond recognition. "Forget about that 500 channel universe. We're now talking about options multiples bigger."

He says with "numerous PPV/VOD type offerings from all players jockeying for position," this is just the start of massive media shift that will see "mainstream linear content channels who wish to keep the status quo" clashing with others keen to "slice, dice and disaggregate content in the same way that iTunes pioneered the ability to search for and then buy just one track rather than a whole album."

Steve May
Home entertainment AV specialist

Steve has been writing about AV and home cinema since the dawn of time, or more accurately, since the glory days of VHS and Betamax. He has strong opinions on the latest TV technology, Hi-Fi and Blu-ray/media players, and likes nothing better than to crank up his ludicrously powerful home theatre system to binge-watch TV shows.