Hey all,
Like you I am a big fan of 3D it is the bees knees as far as I am concerned.. Lately there has not been much news on the 3D Fron from NVidia.. I was wondering if something new is coming or any rumors about new 3D Equipment??
I was specifically wondering about getting a 4K TriplePorojectoir setup.. yes I know probally going to be very spendy but I would love to hear of any new equipment for 3D and NVidia 3D Vsion??
Heck I would be happy to get 3 new 1080P 3D Projectors on my system
Like you I am a big fan of 3D it is the bees knees as far as I am concerned.. Lately there has not been much news on the 3D Fron from NVidia.. I was wondering if something new is coming or any rumors about new 3D Equipment??
I was specifically wondering about getting a 4K TriplePorojectoir setup.. yes I know probally going to be very spendy but I would love to hear of any new equipment for 3D and NVidia 3D Vsion??
Heck I would be happy to get 3 new 1080P 3D Projectors on my system
bo3b came across a new DLP chip listed at Texas Instruments that's for wobulated 4K resolution.
The chip alone is $2400 from what bo3b said.
[url]https://forums.geforce.com/default/topic/884748/3d-vision/is-there-a-future-for-3d-vision-the-hardware-version-/7/#reply[/url]
The thing with wobulation, is that it's the same technique used in DLP TVs and is perfect for implementing Checkerboard 3D. While it's an interlaced format and not full frame 3D, it's doable with the current bandwidth limitations. Well at least until Display Port 1.3 is implemented.
If they came out with 1920x1080P@120Hz Ultra Short Throw Projectors, a person might be able to mount 2 on the ceiling for the top half and have two down below for the bottom half. Effectively equaling 3960x2160P@120Hz gaming, that's if Nvidia would support it on consumer GPUs. For a person that could afford it, that would mean 4K gaming on a 120 inch screen :P
The thing with wobulation, is that it's the same technique used in DLP TVs and is perfect for implementing Checkerboard 3D. While it's an interlaced format and not full frame 3D, it's doable with the current bandwidth limitations. Well at least until Display Port 1.3 is implemented.
If they came out with 1920x1080P@120Hz Ultra Short Throw Projectors, a person might be able to mount 2 on the ceiling for the top half and have two down below for the bottom half. Effectively equaling 3960x2160P@120Hz gaming, that's if Nvidia would support it on consumer GPUs. For a person that could afford it, that would mean 4K gaming on a 120 inch screen :P
Well they are referencing newer equipbment but none of it is certified nvida 3D.. I am wondering if any news on what NVidia is planning in the future for 3D Vision.. like any news on CES 2016 is anybody here going??
Well they are referencing newer equipbment but none of it is certified nvida 3D.. I am wondering if any news on what NVidia is planning in the future for 3D Vision.. like any news on CES 2016 is anybody here going??
Nvidia hasn't demoed or mentioned 3D at an event in the last three years. In 2012 their booth was all about Tegra Devices with an outside booth that had cars using Nvidia's chips. The only ones showing 3D Vision were racing simulator vendors
I'll bet that it's all about the Shield, Streaming, Game Servers and their Digital Game Distribution this year.
""GeForce NOW is NVIDIA's industry-leading game-streaming service. With GeForce NOW you’ll not only be able to seamlessly stream the games listed below. Thanks to our holiday promotion you'll save big when you purchase them. Straight from our network of cloud-gaming supercomputers to any of your SHIELD devices, consider GeForce NOW your own cloud gaming library.""
http://shield.nvidia.com/shield-sitemap
http://shield.nvidia.com/game-stream
http://shield.nvidia.com/games/geforce-now
http://shield.nvidia.com/blog/shield-games-holiday-sale
[color="orange"]NVIDIA wants you in their Cloud[/color]
EDIT: They will probably have an Oculus, since they are launching Q1.
Nvidia hasn't demoed or mentioned 3D at an event in the last three years. In 2012 their booth was all about Tegra Devices with an outside booth that had cars using Nvidia's chips. The only ones showing 3D Vision were racing simulator vendors
I'll bet that it's all about the Shield, Streaming, Game Servers and their Digital Game Distribution this year.
If you haven't seen it, StarBreeze Studios, the developers of Brothers: A Tale Of Two Sons have a VR Headset that offers a 210 degree fov. I'm not sure if they made it after or acquired it with their acquisition of InfinitEye, a French developer of VR hardware.
Also, they have a MotorHome/RV, that they drive around giving demoes.
http://starbreeze.com/2015/07/starbreeze-skybound-and-505-games-to-attend-san-diego-comic-con-showcasing-the-mobile-starvr-overkills-the-walking-dead-vr-experience-payday-2/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GADtniiZL9c
EDIT: The VR Headset came along with the acquisition.
Here's a good review of it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GiZvF2bIBoE
If you haven't seen it, StarBreeze Studios, the developers of Brothers: A Tale Of Two Sons have a VR Headset that offers a 210 degree fov. I'm not sure if they made it after or acquired it with their acquisition of InfinitEye, a French developer of VR hardware.
http://www.engadget.com/2016/01/04/nvidia-drive-px2/
NVIDIA's sequel to the Drive PX in-car computer it debuted last year is a liquid-cooled beast with the power equivalent to 150 MacBook Pros. Say hello to the Drive PX 2. It sports 12 CPU cores and has 8 teraflops worth of processing power -- similar to about 6 Titan X video cards. NVIDIA also claims that it can achieve 24 trillion operations a second, which should make it particularly useful for powering self-driving cars. Jen-Hsun Huang, NVIDIA's CEO, says it's the first supercomputer made for cars -- it's certainly the first we've seen with such insane specs.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jfSnc0yNvm8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gpg__X2lNYI
NVIDIA's sequel to the Drive PX in-car computer it debuted last year is a liquid-cooled beast with the power equivalent to 150 MacBook Pros. Say hello to the Drive PX 2. It sports 12 CPU cores and has 8 teraflops worth of processing power -- similar to about 6 Titan X video cards. NVIDIA also claims that it can achieve 24 trillion operations a second, which should make it particularly useful for powering self-driving cars. Jen-Hsun Huang, NVIDIA's CEO, says it's the first supercomputer made for cars -- it's certainly the first we've seen with such insane specs.
Here's a review of Acer's new Z650 Predator projector by Kraine on his French website. He hasn't posted anything on CES yet, but he also might not be at it this year.
https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=y&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.projection-homecinema.fr%2F2015%2F12%2F26%2Ftest-acer-z650-predator%2F&edit-text=&act=url
French link
http://www.projection-homecinema.fr/2015/12/26/test-acer-z650-predator/
Here's a review of Acer's new Z650 Predator projector by Kraine on his French website. He hasn't posted anything on CES yet, but he also might not be at it this year.
Only thing that I've seen so far, is the PF1000U
http://www.lg.com/us/home-video/lg-PF1000U-smart-led-projector
Check out this video at 11:38, otherwise the video is not really worth watching.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=55la7bJhd04
Here's a link to the manual.
[url]http://www.lg.com/us/support-product/lg-PF1000U#manuals[/url]
Hmmm. no comments on what is shown at 11:38 in that video?
This is huge, 3-7 years too late in coming. But potentially huge going forward for 2K and 4K.
This is the "first" projector to support Checkerboard as an input format!!
"Depending on what resolution and refresh rates are supported", this could be the projector equivalent of a rear projection Mitsubishi 3D HDTV.
In other words this might possibly be a viable 1080i projector gaming solution. Not the 120Hz 1080P frame sequential that we have been hoping for, but certainly something that's long overdue and something that should have and could have been done several years ago.
Currently, the only 1080p solutions are Dual Passive Projection or $20,0000 plus Dual Link DVI projectors.
So at least 1080i would be a step in the right direction and affordable, but of course we should have had this at least 3-7 years ago.
So if Checkerboard is not stuck at 24Hz, it could be possible to use 4 of these to make a 120 inch 4K Checkerboard, if Nvidia would support 4 displays at once in 3D.
Edit: BTW this projector is available now in certain countries.
Hmmm. no comments on what is shown at 11:38 in that video?
This is huge, 3-7 years too late in coming. But potentially huge going forward for 2K and 4K.
This is the "first" projector to support Checkerboard as an input format!!
"Depending on what resolution and refresh rates are supported", this could be the projector equivalent of a rear projection Mitsubishi 3D HDTV.
In other words this might possibly be a viable 1080i projector gaming solution. Not the 120Hz 1080P frame sequential that we have been hoping for, but certainly something that's long overdue and something that should have and could have been done several years ago.
Currently, the only 1080p solutions are Dual Passive Projection or $20,0000 plus Dual Link DVI projectors.
So at least 1080i would be a step in the right direction and affordable, but of course we should have had this at least 3-7 years ago.
So if Checkerboard is not stuck at 24Hz, it could be possible to use 4 of these to make a 120 inch 4K Checkerboard, if Nvidia would support 4 displays at once in 3D.
Edit: BTW this projector is available now in certain countries.
Interesting, back then the manual wasn't online. Looking at it now, it doesn't mention Checkerboard at all. Obviously it supports it, you can see it in the video. AFAIK, it's the only projector that does support the format for whatever unknown reason.
Anyhow the owner's manual says 1080P@60 Single Frame Sequential. FWIW, who knows
[img]https://forums.geforce.com/cmd/default/download-comment-attachment/75060/[/img]
Edit: hmm, looking at that video again, it also shows it supporting a Line Interleaved Format for input, which means that it should work with Optomized for GeForce.
Why da duck, do not all projectors support these formats :(
Let's hope LG makes a 4K with these format options.
Interesting, back then the manual wasn't online. Looking at it now, it doesn't mention Checkerboard at all. Obviously it supports it, you can see it in the video. AFAIK, it's the only projector that does support the format for whatever unknown reason.
Anyhow the owner's manual says 1080P@60 Single Frame Sequential. FWIW, who knows
Edit: hmm, looking at that video again, it also shows it supporting a Line Interleaved Format for input, which means that it should work with Optomized for GeForce.
Why da duck, do not all projectors support these formats :(
Let's hope LG makes a 4K with these format options.
Like you I am a big fan of 3D it is the bees knees as far as I am concerned.. Lately there has not been much news on the 3D Fron from NVidia.. I was wondering if something new is coming or any rumors about new 3D Equipment??
I was specifically wondering about getting a 4K TriplePorojectoir setup.. yes I know probally going to be very spendy but I would love to hear of any new equipment for 3D and NVidia 3D Vsion??
Heck I would be happy to get 3 new 1080P 3D Projectors on my system
Intel i5 7600K @ 4.8ghz / MSI Z270 SLI / Asus 1080GTX - 416.16 / Optoma HD142x Projector / 1 4'x10' Curved Screen PVC / TrackIR / HOTAS Cougar / Cougar MFD's / Track IR / NVidia 3D Vision / Win 10 64bit
The chip alone is $2400 from what bo3b said.
https://forums.geforce.com/default/topic/884748/3d-vision/is-there-a-future-for-3d-vision-the-hardware-version-/7/#reply
The thing with wobulation, is that it's the same technique used in DLP TVs and is perfect for implementing Checkerboard 3D. While it's an interlaced format and not full frame 3D, it's doable with the current bandwidth limitations. Well at least until Display Port 1.3 is implemented.
If they came out with 1920x1080P@120Hz Ultra Short Throw Projectors, a person might be able to mount 2 on the ceiling for the top half and have two down below for the bottom half. Effectively equaling 3960x2160P@120Hz gaming, that's if Nvidia would support it on consumer GPUs. For a person that could afford it, that would mean 4K gaming on a 120 inch screen :P
Intel i5 7600K @ 4.8ghz / MSI Z270 SLI / Asus 1080GTX - 416.16 / Optoma HD142x Projector / 1 4'x10' Curved Screen PVC / TrackIR / HOTAS Cougar / Cougar MFD's / Track IR / NVidia 3D Vision / Win 10 64bit
I'll bet that it's all about the Shield, Streaming, Game Servers and their Digital Game Distribution this year.
""GeForce NOW is NVIDIA's industry-leading game-streaming service. With GeForce NOW you’ll not only be able to seamlessly stream the games listed below. Thanks to our holiday promotion you'll save big when you purchase them. Straight from our network of cloud-gaming supercomputers to any of your SHIELD devices, consider GeForce NOW your own cloud gaming library.""
http://shield.nvidia.com/shield-sitemap
http://shield.nvidia.com/game-stream
http://shield.nvidia.com/games/geforce-now
http://shield.nvidia.com/blog/shield-games-holiday-sale
NVIDIA wants you in their Cloud
EDIT: They will probably have an Oculus, since they are launching Q1.
Also, they have a MotorHome/RV, that they drive around giving demoes.
http://starbreeze.com/2015/07/starbreeze-skybound-and-505-games-to-attend-san-diego-comic-con-showcasing-the-mobile-starvr-overkills-the-walking-dead-vr-experience-payday-2/
EDIT: The VR Headset came along with the acquisition.
Here's a good review of it.
NVIDIA's sequel to the Drive PX in-car computer it debuted last year is a liquid-cooled beast with the power equivalent to 150 MacBook Pros. Say hello to the Drive PX 2. It sports 12 CPU cores and has 8 teraflops worth of processing power -- similar to about 6 Titan X video cards. NVIDIA also claims that it can achieve 24 trillion operations a second, which should make it particularly useful for powering self-driving cars. Jen-Hsun Huang, NVIDIA's CEO, says it's the first supercomputer made for cars -- it's certainly the first we've seen with such insane specs.
https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=y&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.projection-homecinema.fr%2F2015%2F12%2F26%2Ftest-acer-z650-predator%2F&edit-text=&act=url
French link
http://www.projection-homecinema.fr/2015/12/26/test-acer-z650-predator/
http://www.lg.com/us/home-video/lg-PF1000U-smart-led-projector
Check out this video at 11:38, otherwise the video is not really worth watching.
Here's a link to the manual.
http://www.lg.com/us/support-product/lg-PF1000U#manuals
This is huge, 3-7 years too late in coming. But potentially huge going forward for 2K and 4K.
This is the "first" projector to support Checkerboard as an input format!!
"Depending on what resolution and refresh rates are supported", this could be the projector equivalent of a rear projection Mitsubishi 3D HDTV.
In other words this might possibly be a viable 1080i projector gaming solution. Not the 120Hz 1080P frame sequential that we have been hoping for, but certainly something that's long overdue and something that should have and could have been done several years ago.
Currently, the only 1080p solutions are Dual Passive Projection or $20,0000 plus Dual Link DVI projectors.
So at least 1080i would be a step in the right direction and affordable, but of course we should have had this at least 3-7 years ago.
So if Checkerboard is not stuck at 24Hz, it could be possible to use 4 of these to make a 120 inch 4K Checkerboard, if Nvidia would support 4 displays at once in 3D.
Edit: BTW this projector is available now in certain countries.
Anyhow the owner's manual says 1080P@60 Single Frame Sequential. FWIW, who knows
Edit: hmm, looking at that video again, it also shows it supporting a Line Interleaved Format for input, which means that it should work with Optomized for GeForce.
Why da duck, do not all projectors support these formats :(
Let's hope LG makes a 4K with these format options.