Zondision opened the ZIMO1 Kickstarter on April 21 and the AI hardware crowd noticed fast. It’s a 27-inch desktop monitor — not a headset, not a TV — running glasses-free light-field 3D with AI eye-tracking. Pledge tiers start at $999 and cap at $1,399 against a $1,999 MSRP.
What the hardware actually is
The panel flips between true 4K 2D and stereoscopic 3D without losing sharpness. Crosstalk sits under 1.5%, the spec that decides whether glasses-free 3D feels real or gives you a headache after ten minutes. A 120Hz dual-eye tracker locks parallax to your head, and a dedicated ASIC handles 3D rendering so the host GPU doesn’t have to carry it. The Game Manager already supports 10,000+ titles plus most stereoscopic video and model formats out of the box.
Why the SDK matters
Most consumer 3D screens ship a closed app store. ZIMO1 ships an open SDK with Unity, Unreal, WebXR, and C++ bindings, plus OpenXR and OpenVR compatibility. An AI agent can push a generated 3D scene, a CAD model, or a medical volume to the screen and read back the eye-tracking stream. Use cases: AI-driven 3D design tools, surgical planning viewers, digital-human demos that need a real audience signal. An actually-open SDK on a consumer monitor in April 2026 is the rare part here.
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