I was curious if anyone knew if there is any influence of viewing distance on the convergence of 3d images. I didn't think so, but haven't found any info on it, so figured that it was worth asking.
I was curious if anyone knew if there is any influence of viewing distance on the convergence of 3d images. I didn't think so, but haven't found any info on it, so figured that it was worth asking.
I have tried moving my head closer and further away from my CRT and it didn't seem to make any significant difference.
The biggest problem on my CRT is the ghosting (double imaging, stereo crosstalk). If I close one eye I can see clear doubles of pretty much everything, and obviously that shouldn't happen with a proper stereoscopic setup, so sadly it looks like CRTs just don't clear the last image quick enough to be really great with shutterglasses like 3D Vision (unless there's some sort of sync issue with CRTs). The ghosting is a little reduced if I run at 100Hz instead of 120.
I'll probably buy a 120Hz LCD in the future, assuming someone can make one without all the issues the Samsung has.
I have tried moving my head closer and further away from my CRT and it didn't seem to make any significant difference.
The biggest problem on my CRT is the ghosting (double imaging, stereo crosstalk). If I close one eye I can see clear doubles of pretty much everything, and obviously that shouldn't happen with a proper stereoscopic setup, so sadly it looks like CRTs just don't clear the last image quick enough to be really great with shutterglasses like 3D Vision (unless there's some sort of sync issue with CRTs). The ghosting is a little reduced if I run at 100Hz instead of 120.
I'll probably buy a 120Hz LCD in the future, assuming someone can make one without all the issues the Samsung has.
The 3D effect is exaggerated the more You move away from the display so You will have to re-adjust.
A object popping halfway out of the monitor will still pop halfway out when You move away. So it will look longer if You don't re-adjust. That is also partly why a 3D cinema screen looks a lot different than just an "oversized" monitor. I noticed it when I made a 3D video of the moon and it turned into an oval if I moved my head back /banana.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':banana:' />
The 3D effect is exaggerated the more You move away from the display so You will have to re-adjust.
A object popping halfway out of the monitor will still pop halfway out when You move away. So it will look longer if You don't re-adjust. That is also partly why a 3D cinema screen looks a lot different than just an "oversized" monitor. I noticed it when I made a 3D video of the moon and it turned into an oval if I moved my head back /banana.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':banana:' />
The biggest problem on my CRT is the ghosting (double imaging, stereo crosstalk). If I close one eye I can see clear doubles of pretty much everything, and obviously that shouldn't happen with a proper stereoscopic setup, so sadly it looks like CRTs just don't clear the last image quick enough to be really great with shutterglasses like 3D Vision (unless there's some sort of sync issue with CRTs). The ghosting is a little reduced if I run at 100Hz instead of 120.
I'll probably buy a 120Hz LCD in the future, assuming someone can make one without all the issues the Samsung has.
The biggest problem on my CRT is the ghosting (double imaging, stereo crosstalk). If I close one eye I can see clear doubles of pretty much everything, and obviously that shouldn't happen with a proper stereoscopic setup, so sadly it looks like CRTs just don't clear the last image quick enough to be really great with shutterglasses like 3D Vision (unless there's some sort of sync issue with CRTs). The ghosting is a little reduced if I run at 100Hz instead of 120.
I'll probably buy a 120Hz LCD in the future, assuming someone can make one without all the issues the Samsung has.
A object popping halfway out of the monitor will still pop halfway out when You move away. So it will look longer if You don't re-adjust. That is also partly why a 3D cinema screen looks a lot different than just an "oversized" monitor. I noticed it when I made a 3D video of the moon and it turned into an oval if I moved my head back
A object popping halfway out of the monitor will still pop halfway out when You move away. So it will look longer if You don't re-adjust. That is also partly why a 3D cinema screen looks a lot different than just an "oversized" monitor. I noticed it when I made a 3D video of the moon and it turned into an oval if I moved my head back