![]() Articles are retrieved via a public feed supplied by the site for this purpose. Questions and comments are welcomed and always answered promptly. makes no claim to the content supplied through this journal account. We're here to help you along your journey. ![]() ![]() Those benefits aren't charity and they aren't a handout.we earn those benefits and if obtaining them takes a bit more effort, so be it. I hope you enjoy what you see here and that you find some value as you research the benefits you earned. Larry was a good friend and mentor and when he became terminally ill I promised I'd carry on the VAWatchdog Dot Org in his memory. Like so many vets out of work, I looked for things to do and met Larry Scott as he was developing the VAWatchdog Dot Org. I retired in the early 2000s due to service connected conditions.old seemingly minor injuries sustained in a training event got much worse with age and I was forced to take the TDIU benefit and I left the work I enjoyed. I used my 91D20 skills to open a career for myself in civilian health care. We can always depend on surprises from our military so I was trained as an operating room technician and sent to the 98th General Hospital in Germany where I served until June of 1970. I entered the Army from Florida in 1967 knowing Vietnam was my next stop. The other fellow above is Larry Scott. He founded the VAWatchdog in 2005. Larry passed away some years ago from a non-service connected illness.Ĭrown Memorial Centers - Larry Scott About me: I was born in a Navy hospital, the son of a marine who went on to 20 years in his beloved USMC Old Corps and E-9 rank at age 36. Hello.I'm Jim Strickland. That's me above, at my VA clinic in Savannah, Georgia. I publish the VAWatchdog.
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![]() These guys will print using just a stereo pair. It is also possible to print the pair multiple times under each lens and then the image will flip back and forth between stereo and pseudo-stereo as you tilt the image or move your head. Other multi-lensed cameras have come and gone with similar printing results. The nimslo shot four frames at once and the printer printed them optically under the lens. Multiple frames beyond a pair is the standard but not always the case. To do this you need to be working with 72lpi or higher (preferably 100lpi or higher) lens frequency. ![]() IF you have the proper equipment and skill it is possible to print at higher lpi frequencies and not notice the lens at arms length. For most one-off solutions the resolution image will be lower res than HD and you will see the individual lenticuals at arms length. If you move your head an inch or so the 3D will go away. I am very new to all this, please excuse any rubbish I have spouted! Have you all experimented with this? Or has it always been using multiple frames, or creating intermediate frames with software?Īny answers would be great. Next question is, how good is the resolution compared to a passive 3D monitor (full HD horizontal, half vertical)? If a viewer holds say a magazine sized lenticular picture (without intermediate layers) at half arm's length (how we normally hold a magazine), are the vertical/ horizontal lines easily visible (depending on the LPI of the sheet used.) How narrow is the sweetspot though - is the experience similar to viewing the parallax barrier screen on my W3? Or worse? Will even moving my head a couple of inches in any direction will result in loss of 3D depth? Harveyfloyd mentioned that it was possible to directly print without intermediate layers (frames) forever - not many do it though. In some earlier threads, I can see discussions on the limitations of printing stereo photos on lenticular. |
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