3D Vision + Real Life 3D perception/focus tracking
I've had 3D vision glasses for about a month now, and my eyeballs have been getting some great focus-practice, especially in tracking high speed objects in 3 dimensions with eyeball tracking. I was changing the oil in my old car with my dad the other day, and we were trying to figure out why 50% of my turn signal lights weren't lighting up. Previously looking at the wiring in my car had looked more like a messy jumble than something I could see and trace, however when viewing the inside of the car I noticed I could see and focus on the different parts while following the wires with my eyes and tracking more easily, even with poor lighting and wires behind parts and bunches. In a sense, my 3D viewing and spatial perception skills seem to have increased dramatically since I started playing all my games with 3D vision for about a month, for around 8 hours per day. :) My other crafting may have also been a factor, I just got level 2 crafting in freehand crapcarving, which is my generic term for all mineral objects based on density, since apparently rocks and metal both carve up with the same superdense tools, albeit with the metal being much harder and more squished dinosaur poop/ancient tree leaves. Although I think the 3D glasses helped more than the carving for that one, although my knowledge of electronics and wiring helped too, along with a generalized knowledge of motors, more electric than gas, although they both do similar things except gas has more parts and power:size/weight. Of course my knowledge of fuels and their uses has also been helped with a lot of fuel and powder based experimentation in the past, so I guess it helps to do a lot of fun different epic things, however the 3D glasses seems to be a good one for learning to see in 3D and track in real life.
I've had 3D vision glasses for about a month now, and my eyeballs have been getting some great focus-practice, especially in tracking high speed objects in 3 dimensions with eyeball tracking. I was changing the oil in my old car with my dad the other day, and we were trying to figure out why 50% of my turn signal lights weren't lighting up. Previously looking at the wiring in my car had looked more like a messy jumble than something I could see and trace, however when viewing the inside of the car I noticed I could see and focus on the different parts while following the wires with my eyes and tracking more easily, even with poor lighting and wires behind parts and bunches. In a sense, my 3D viewing and spatial perception skills seem to have increased dramatically since I started playing all my games with 3D vision for about a month, for around 8 hours per day. :) My other crafting may have also been a factor, I just got level 2 crafting in freehand crapcarving, which is my generic term for all mineral objects based on density, since apparently rocks and metal both carve up with the same superdense tools, albeit with the metal being much harder and more squished dinosaur poop/ancient tree leaves. Although I think the 3D glasses helped more than the carving for that one, although my knowledge of electronics and wiring helped too, along with a generalized knowledge of motors, more electric than gas, although they both do similar things except gas has more parts and power:size/weight. Of course my knowledge of fuels and their uses has also been helped with a lot of fuel and powder based experimentation in the past, so I guess it helps to do a lot of fun different epic things, however the 3D glasses seems to be a good one for learning to see in 3D and track in real life.
I've had 3D vision glasses for about a month now, and my eyeballs have been getting some great focus-practice, especially in tracking high speed objects in 3 dimensions with eyeball tracking. I was changing the oil in my old car with my dad the other day, and we were trying to figure out why 50% of my turn signal lights weren't lighting up. Previously looking at the wiring in my car had looked more like a messy jumble than something I could see and trace, however when viewing the inside of the car I noticed I could see and focus on the different parts while following the wires with my eyes and tracking more easily, even with poor lighting and wires behind parts and bunches. In a sense, my 3D viewing and spatial perception skills seem to have increased dramatically since I started playing all my games with 3D vision for about a month, for around 8 hours per day. :) My other crafting may have also been a factor, I just got level 2 crafting in freehand crapcarving, which is my generic term for all mineral objects based on density, since apparently rocks and metal both carve up with the same superdense tools, albeit with the metal being much harder and more squished dinosaur poop/ancient tree leaves. Although I think the 3D glasses helped more than the carving for that one, although my knowledge of electronics and wiring helped too, along with a generalized knowledge of motors, more electric than gas, although they both do similar things except gas has more parts and power:size/weight. Of course my knowledge of fuels and their uses has also been helped with a lot of fuel and powder based experimentation in the past, so I guess it helps to do a lot of fun different epic things, however the 3D glasses seems to be a good one for learning to see in 3D and track in real life.
I've had 3D vision glasses for about a month now, and my eyeballs have been getting some great focus-practice, especially in tracking high speed objects in 3 dimensions with eyeball tracking. I was changing the oil in my old car with my dad the other day, and we were trying to figure out why 50% of my turn signal lights weren't lighting up. Previously looking at the wiring in my car had looked more like a messy jumble than something I could see and trace, however when viewing the inside of the car I noticed I could see and focus on the different parts while following the wires with my eyes and tracking more easily, even with poor lighting and wires behind parts and bunches. In a sense, my 3D viewing and spatial perception skills seem to have increased dramatically since I started playing all my games with 3D vision for about a month, for around 8 hours per day. :) My other crafting may have also been a factor, I just got level 2 crafting in freehand crapcarving, which is my generic term for all mineral objects based on density, since apparently rocks and metal both carve up with the same superdense tools, albeit with the metal being much harder and more squished dinosaur poop/ancient tree leaves. Although I think the 3D glasses helped more than the carving for that one, although my knowledge of electronics and wiring helped too, along with a generalized knowledge of motors, more electric than gas, although they both do similar things except gas has more parts and power:size/weight. Of course my knowledge of fuels and their uses has also been helped with a lot of fuel and powder based experimentation in the past, so I guess it helps to do a lot of fun different epic things, however the 3D glasses seems to be a good one for learning to see in 3D and track in real life.
Yup me too. Placebo or no, I can now see the legal distance to drive without glasses. It is obviously not the retinas because they are still focused at screen depth but it might be the tracking muscles. 3D just keeps on giving!
Yup me too. Placebo or no, I can now see the legal distance to drive without glasses. It is obviously not the retinas because they are still focused at screen depth but it might be the tracking muscles. 3D just keeps on giving!
Lord, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.
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Vitals: Windows 7 64bit, i5 2500 @ 4.4ghz, SLI GTX670, 8GB, Viewsonic VX2268WM
Yup me too. Placebo or no, I can now see the legal distance to drive without glasses. It is obviously not the retinas because they are still focused at screen depth but it might be the tracking muscles. 3D just keeps on giving!
Yup me too. Placebo or no, I can now see the legal distance to drive without glasses. It is obviously not the retinas because they are still focused at screen depth but it might be the tracking muscles. 3D just keeps on giving!
Lord, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.
-------------------
Vitals: Windows 7 64bit, i5 2500 @ 4.4ghz, SLI GTX670, 8GB, Viewsonic VX2268WM
Lord, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.
-------------------
Vitals: Windows 7 64bit, i5 2500 @ 4.4ghz, SLI GTX670, 8GB, Viewsonic VX2268WM
Handy Driver Discussion
Helix Mod - community fixes
Bo3b's Shaderhacker School - How to fix 3D in games
3dsolutionsgaming.com - videos, reviews and 3D fixes
Lord, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.
-------------------
Vitals: Windows 7 64bit, i5 2500 @ 4.4ghz, SLI GTX670, 8GB, Viewsonic VX2268WM
Handy Driver Discussion
Helix Mod - community fixes
Bo3b's Shaderhacker School - How to fix 3D in games
3dsolutionsgaming.com - videos, reviews and 3D fixes