I'm currently in the midst of upgrading my whole set up at my household, new T.V., new computer, new monitors, new everything. I'm currently attempting to buy three 120Hz monitors for my new desktop, however, it currently seems to be impossible to find a 120Hz monitor that doesn't come with nvidia 3D glasses & either isn't the exact same price as one WITH glasses, or, hasn't got thousands of reviews about how shit the quality is (BenQ). So, assuming that I buy 3 monitors, I'll be getting three pairs of glasses (Great...), along with the 1 pair I got with my laptop (G74S), that'll total four. On top of that, I'm also upgrading my T.V. to a 120Hz (Or maybe 240Hz, future proofing!) so that'll probably come with a few more.
My question really:- Since I'm ending up with so many glasses, are there any T.V.s that support NVIDIA glasses so at-least I can use them for when people come? Rather than just having 4+ glasses sitting on my desk.
I'm currently in the midst of upgrading my whole set up at my household, new T.V., new computer, new monitors, new everything. I'm currently attempting to buy three 120Hz monitors for my new desktop, however, it currently seems to be impossible to find a 120Hz monitor that doesn't come with nvidia 3D glasses & either isn't the exact same price as one WITH glasses, or, hasn't got thousands of reviews about how shit the quality is (BenQ). So, assuming that I buy 3 monitors, I'll be getting three pairs of glasses (Great...), along with the 1 pair I got with my laptop (G74S), that'll total four. On top of that, I'm also upgrading my T.V. to a 120Hz (Or maybe 240Hz, future proofing!) so that'll probably come with a few more.
My question really:- Since I'm ending up with so many glasses, are there any T.V.s that support NVIDIA glasses so at-least I can use them for when people come? Rather than just having 4+ glasses sitting on my desk.
First, keep in mind Tvs only accept a 60Hz input. Maybe there will come a day where they accept a 120Hz input signal.
DOA, bad pixels, faulty emitters, streaks down the middle of the display, back light bleeding, horrible colors, terrible warranty service.....the list goes on and on. You're going to have to roll the dice, just do it on a day when the stars are aligned in your favor.
Seriously, a brick and mortar store without a restocking fee is the best bet. So if you do not like it you can return it easily. Monitors with bad pixels will only lead to a song and dance from online retailers and manufacturers. Anymore, you'll end up paying return shipping, but that can be a wash, with the price of gas these days.
First, keep in mind Tvs only accept a 60Hz input. Maybe there will come a day where they accept a 120Hz input signal.
DOA, bad pixels, faulty emitters, streaks down the middle of the display, back light bleeding, horrible colors, terrible warranty service.....the list goes on and on. You're going to have to roll the dice, just do it on a day when the stars are aligned in your favor.
Seriously, a brick and mortar store without a restocking fee is the best bet. So if you do not like it you can return it easily. Monitors with bad pixels will only lead to a song and dance from online retailers and manufacturers. Anymore, you'll end up paying return shipping, but that can be a wash, with the price of gas these days.
If you end up with three more pairs of glasses while buying the cheapest good solution you can't really buy any cheaper. Don't expect to use them with your TV so you could probably sell the glasses you don't need.
If you end up with three more pairs of glasses while buying the cheapest good solution you can't really buy any cheaper. Don't expect to use them with your TV so you could probably sell the glasses you don't need.
Thanks to everybody using my assembler it warms my heart.
To have a critical piece of code that everyone can enjoy!
What more can you ask for?
My question really:- Since I'm ending up with so many glasses, are there any T.V.s that support NVIDIA glasses so at-least I can use them for when people come? Rather than just having 4+ glasses sitting on my desk.
DOA, bad pixels, faulty emitters, streaks down the middle of the display, back light bleeding, horrible colors, terrible warranty service.....the list goes on and on. You're going to have to roll the dice, just do it on a day when the stars are aligned in your favor.
Seriously, a brick and mortar store without a restocking fee is the best bet. So if you do not like it you can return it easily. Monitors with bad pixels will only lead to a song and dance from online retailers and manufacturers. Anymore, you'll end up paying return shipping, but that can be a wash, with the price of gas these days.
Thanks to everybody using my assembler it warms my heart.
To have a critical piece of code that everyone can enjoy!
What more can you ask for?
donations: ulfjalmbrant@hotmail.com