I already knew all of the above. You failed to answer my questions.
I want to know how the screen is designed, and how that technically improves stereoscopic polarization.
I can explain how weaves work for AT.
I can explain how emulsifed glass beads work for retroreflectivity.
I can explain why some screens can reduce hotspotting more than others.
I cannot explain how this screen works to improve polarization, and if there would be any negative side effects for 2D BD viewing.
Polarized screens I'm NOT an expert on but the general concept is that you would need a projector with a spinning polarizer and high output rate or a dual projector setup with individual polarization and then this screen will allow for polarized glasses to deliver the 3D effect as you got if you saw Avatar.
This is different than the standard which Blu-ray is striving for with 3D which uses a single, standard 3D (120hz source) projector with a 3D BD player (120hz content delivery, AVC 3D format) and active shutter glasses.
The plus side is that you can use cheap glasses.
The down side is that you need all the polarization equipment at the projector side of things to make it all work - which is very expensive when you only have a few viewers who aren't likely to steal your $.29 glasses.
Far less expensive to get a standard screen and a (forthcoming) 3D capable 1080p projector from Panasonic or Epson this fall, and then pair it with good 3D active shutter glasses.
There is no ill effects from 2D viewing on a polarized screen as long as you aren't wearing the polarized glasses as far as I know. This is the same type of screen used at 3D theaters and prior to the film starting you likely will see 2D previews without any issue at all.
This is just not the type of 3D which is being planned for home delivery this year... it's far more complex.