[quote="BlackSharkfr"]Lightfield displays are still in the very early stages of development. We aren't going to see such products for years. There is no point in speculating about price of hardware or it's technical performance.[/quote]
mistersvin21 said that it'll be release in 2019-2010 and nvidia would like use pascal tegra chip on it, as of right now most vr headset is above $300 that have everything built in.
BlackSharkfr said:Lightfield displays are still in the very early stages of development. We aren't going to see such products for years. There is no point in speculating about price of hardware or it's technical performance.
mistersvin21 said that it'll be release in 2019-2010 and nvidia would like use pascal tegra chip on it, as of right now most vr headset is above $300 that have everything built in.
An "everything built-in" VR headset with a 200W on-board GPU chip... right...
As lovely as it would be to have a futuristic all-in-one VR headset for 300$... it's not going to happen. I'm still waiting for my flying car and my personal jeptack please.
[quote]most vr headset is above $300 that have everything built in[/quote]
No... quite the opposite.
All the high-end headsets cost way more than 300$ (don't forget the hand presence tools the big powerful PC/console to generate the pictures), and transfer as much hardware and sensors outside of the headset as possible in order to keep the headset light and with low power consumption.
An "everything built-in" VR headset with a 200W on-board GPU chip... right...
As lovely as it would be to have a futuristic all-in-one VR headset for 300$... it's not going to happen. I'm still waiting for my flying car and my personal jeptack please.
most vr headset is above $300 that have everything built in
No... quite the opposite.
All the high-end headsets cost way more than 300$ (don't forget the hand presence tools the big powerful PC/console to generate the pictures), and transfer as much hardware and sensors outside of the headset as possible in order to keep the headset light and with low power consumption.
Passive 3D forever
110" DIY dual-projection system
2x Epson EH-TW3500 (1080p) + Linear Polarizers (SPAR)
XtremScreen Daylight 2.0
VNS Geobox501 signal converter
[quote="Nintendians-2"][quote="BlackSharkfr"]Lightfield displays are still in the very early stages of development. We aren't going to see such products for years. There is no point in speculating about price of hardware or it's technical performance.[/quote]
mistersvin21 said that it'll be release in 2019-2010 and nvidia would like use pascal tegra chip on it, as of right now most vr headset is above $300 that have everything built in.[/quote]
i didn't say "it'll be released", and i don't rly remember, u could use google to search for info . And why are trying to bring EVERYTHING to money ? This is not a question of price while something is in development only. Are u going to spend on it $400 in two years and not $405 ? u can start saving money right now ;-)
BlackSharkfr said:Lightfield displays are still in the very early stages of development. We aren't going to see such products for years. There is no point in speculating about price of hardware or it's technical performance.
mistersvin21 said that it'll be release in 2019-2010 and nvidia would like use pascal tegra chip on it, as of right now most vr headset is above $300 that have everything built in.
i didn't say "it'll be released", and i don't rly remember, u could use google to search for info . And why are trying to bring EVERYTHING to money ? This is not a question of price while something is in development only. Are u going to spend on it $400 in two years and not $405 ? u can start saving money right now ;-)
[quote="shinra358"]Don't listen to these guys. These glasses are doing the exact same thing that the nvidia technology is doing except for everything is in the glasses instead of it being drm'd to certain devices to force you to buy said devices. Glasses free 3D is just as great as 3Dvision. And it looks like this will be too. Guy's on this forum support nvidia and everything they do without question no matter how much they screw them over. Just remember that. You'll get no decent unbiased convo here.
Only problem is, the production of these glasses seem cancelled...[/quote]
What is this dude smoking?
Edimensional sold a product exactly like this about ten years ago, they probably still do. It was a box that you hooked up to your tv to make everything, movies, broadcast tv, etc.. 3D. From what I remember it sucked.
shinra358 said:Don't listen to these guys. These glasses are doing the exact same thing that the nvidia technology is doing except for everything is in the glasses instead of it being drm'd to certain devices to force you to buy said devices. Glasses free 3D is just as great as 3Dvision. And it looks like this will be too. Guy's on this forum support nvidia and everything they do without question no matter how much they screw them over. Just remember that. You'll get no decent unbiased convo here.
Only problem is, the production of these glasses seem cancelled...
What is this dude smoking?
Edimensional sold a product exactly like this about ten years ago, they probably still do. It was a box that you hooked up to your tv to make everything, movies, broadcast tv, etc.. 3D. From what I remember it sucked.
The Edimensional glasses were very similar to Nvidia's own glasses. Not the 3D Vision glasses, the ones that came before : the ELSA 3D Revelator (bought quickly after by Nvidia).
These glasses worked at any refresh rate, they synced directly to the display through a special splitter along the VGA signal. They died exactly at the same time as every other active 3D glasses when we switched displays from high refresh rate (100Hz+) analog CRTs to strict 60Hz digital LCD monitors and TVs.
I never tried Edimensional's glasses, but I did own the Nvidia 3D Revelator glasses. They were ugly as hell and used expendable button cell batteries, but they worked very well. Lots of great memories of playing the original Unreal Tournament in stereo 3D using the old legacy Nvidia 3D drivers on my Riva TNT2 32 Ultra. Good old times...
I did try them again a few years later when I bought one of the first "fast response" LCD monitors (Samsung 226BW), it didn't work that well. The 60Hz blinking was particularly horrible.
The Edimensional glasses were very similar to Nvidia's own glasses. Not the 3D Vision glasses, the ones that came before : the ELSA 3D Revelator (bought quickly after by Nvidia).
These glasses worked at any refresh rate, they synced directly to the display through a special splitter along the VGA signal. They died exactly at the same time as every other active 3D glasses when we switched displays from high refresh rate (100Hz+) analog CRTs to strict 60Hz digital LCD monitors and TVs.
I never tried Edimensional's glasses, but I did own the Nvidia 3D Revelator glasses. They were ugly as hell and used expendable button cell batteries, but they worked very well. Lots of great memories of playing the original Unreal Tournament in stereo 3D using the old legacy Nvidia 3D drivers on my Riva TNT2 32 Ultra. Good old times...
I did try them again a few years later when I bought one of the first "fast response" LCD monitors (Samsung 226BW), it didn't work that well. The 60Hz blinking was particularly horrible.
Passive 3D forever
110" DIY dual-projection system
2x Epson EH-TW3500 (1080p) + Linear Polarizers (SPAR)
XtremScreen Daylight 2.0
VNS Geobox501 signal converter
[quote="nvidiaoracle"]
What is this dude smoking?
Edimensional sold a product exactly like this about ten years ago, they probably still do. It was a box that you hooked up to your tv to make everything, movies, broadcast tv, etc.. 3D. From what I remember it sucked.[/quote]
The eDimensional glasses didn't really suck but the support sucked for them. I owned a first generation of edimensonal glasses but I stopped using them when switched to LCD. Back then many games worked out of the box because they were not using lighting, ambient occlusion and other effects that are now broken in every game.
Edimensional sold a product exactly like this about ten years ago, they probably still do. It was a box that you hooked up to your tv to make everything, movies, broadcast tv, etc.. 3D. From what I remember it sucked.
The eDimensional glasses didn't really suck but the support sucked for them. I owned a first generation of edimensonal glasses but I stopped using them when switched to LCD. Back then many games worked out of the box because they were not using lighting, ambient occlusion and other effects that are now broken in every game.
Intel i7 8086K
Gigabyte GTX 1080Ti Aorus Extreme
DDR4 2x8gb 3200mhz Cl14
TV LG OLED65E6V
Windows 10 64bits
[quote="BlackSharkfr"]An "everything built-in" VR headset with a 200W on-board GPU chip... right...
As lovely as it would be to have a futuristic all-in-one VR headset for 300$... it's not going to happen. I'm still waiting for my flying car and my personal jeptack please.
[quote]most vr headset is above $300 that have everything built in[/quote]
No... quite the opposite.
All the high-end headsets cost way more than 300$ (don't forget the hand presence tools the big powerful PC/console to generate the pictures), and transfer as much hardware and sensors outside of the headset as possible in order to keep the headset light and with low power consumption.
[/quote]
is more like to work with nvidia gpu and not everything else unless it does cinema mode on it's vr.
i did say above $300 u.s. dollars, unless nvidia want to make it cheap.
BlackSharkfr said:An "everything built-in" VR headset with a 200W on-board GPU chip... right...
As lovely as it would be to have a futuristic all-in-one VR headset for 300$... it's not going to happen. I'm still waiting for my flying car and my personal jeptack please.
most vr headset is above $300 that have everything built in
No... quite the opposite.
All the high-end headsets cost way more than 300$ (don't forget the hand presence tools the big powerful PC/console to generate the pictures), and transfer as much hardware and sensors outside of the headset as possible in order to keep the headset light and with low power consumption.
is more like to work with nvidia gpu and not everything else unless it does cinema mode on it's vr.
i did say above $300 u.s. dollars, unless nvidia want to make it cheap.
[quote="mistersvin21"][quote="Nintendians-2"][quote="BlackSharkfr"]Lightfield displays are still in the very early stages of development. We aren't going to see such products for years. There is no point in speculating about price of hardware or it's technical performance.[/quote]
mistersvin21 said that it'll be release in 2019-2010 and nvidia would like use pascal tegra chip on it, as of right now most vr headset is above $300 that have everything built in.[/quote]
i didn't say "it'll be released", and i don't rly remember, u could use google to search for info . And why are trying to bring EVERYTHING to money ? This is not a question of price while something is in development only. Are u going to spend on it $400 in two years and not $405 ? u can start saving money right now ;-)[/quote]
okay, i might have misread your post. well if it does comes out, nvidia is not giving out for free anyway.
BlackSharkfr said:Lightfield displays are still in the very early stages of development. We aren't going to see such products for years. There is no point in speculating about price of hardware or it's technical performance.
mistersvin21 said that it'll be release in 2019-2010 and nvidia would like use pascal tegra chip on it, as of right now most vr headset is above $300 that have everything built in.
i didn't say "it'll be released", and i don't rly remember, u could use google to search for info . And why are trying to bring EVERYTHING to money ? This is not a question of price while something is in development only. Are u going to spend on it $400 in two years and not $405 ? u can start saving money right now ;-)
okay, i might have misread your post. well if it does comes out, nvidia is not giving out for free anyway.
[quote="nvidiaoracle"][quote="shinra358"]Don't listen to these guys. These glasses are doing the exact same thing that the nvidia technology is doing except for everything is in the glasses instead of it being drm'd to certain devices to force you to buy said devices. Glasses free 3D is just as great as 3Dvision. And it looks like this will be too. Guy's on this forum support nvidia and everything they do without question no matter how much they screw them over. Just remember that. You'll get no decent unbiased convo here.
Only problem is, the production of these glasses seem cancelled...[/quote]
What is this dude smoking?
Edimensional sold a product exactly like this about ten years ago, they probably still do. It was a box that you hooked up to your tv to make everything, movies, broadcast tv, etc.. 3D. From what I remember it sucked.[/quote]
i don't see a 3d converter box on their site, just the glasses.
shinra358 said:Don't listen to these guys. These glasses are doing the exact same thing that the nvidia technology is doing except for everything is in the glasses instead of it being drm'd to certain devices to force you to buy said devices. Glasses free 3D is just as great as 3Dvision. And it looks like this will be too. Guy's on this forum support nvidia and everything they do without question no matter how much they screw them over. Just remember that. You'll get no decent unbiased convo here.
Only problem is, the production of these glasses seem cancelled...
What is this dude smoking?
Edimensional sold a product exactly like this about ten years ago, they probably still do. It was a box that you hooked up to your tv to make everything, movies, broadcast tv, etc.. 3D. From what I remember it sucked.
i don't see a 3d converter box on their site, just the glasses.
It was the VirtualFX 3D TV Converter and is now discontinued.
They had much more products on this time:
[url]https://web.archive.org/web/20100305233334/http://www.edimensional.com:80/index.php?cPath=21[/url]
I personally had the "E-D Wired 3D Glasses for the PC". It was coming with a software, but it was not so effective than the nvidia stereoscopic driver (the 3Dvison ancestor) witch I used with the e-dimensional glasses.
I personally had the "E-D Wired 3D Glasses for the PC". It was coming with a software, but it was not so effective than the nvidia stereoscopic driver (the 3Dvison ancestor) witch I used with the e-dimensional glasses.
The 3DFury also offers the same thing as the Edison 3D. It was added as a side/additional feature and it sucked for the most part. There are reviews of this feature on AVS forums.
The 3DFury was primarily targeted at Projector issues and has a lot of features, but is also pretty pricey.
http://www.3dfury.eu/specs.html
The 3DFury also offers the same thing as the Edison 3D. It was added as a side/additional feature and it sucked for the most part. There are reviews of this feature on AVS forums.
The 3DFury was primarily targeted at Projector issues and has a lot of features, but is also pretty pricey.
http://www.3dfury.eu/specs.html
mistersvin21 said that it'll be release in 2019-2010 and nvidia would like use pascal tegra chip on it, as of right now most vr headset is above $300 that have everything built in.
As lovely as it would be to have a futuristic all-in-one VR headset for 300$... it's not going to happen. I'm still waiting for my flying car and my personal jeptack please.
No... quite the opposite.
All the high-end headsets cost way more than 300$ (don't forget the hand presence tools the big powerful PC/console to generate the pictures), and transfer as much hardware and sensors outside of the headset as possible in order to keep the headset light and with low power consumption.
Passive 3D forever
110" DIY dual-projection system
2x Epson EH-TW3500 (1080p) + Linear Polarizers (SPAR)
XtremScreen Daylight 2.0
VNS Geobox501 signal converter
i didn't say "it'll be released", and i don't rly remember, u could use google to search for info . And why are trying to bring EVERYTHING to money ? This is not a question of price while something is in development only. Are u going to spend on it $400 in two years and not $405 ? u can start saving money right now ;-)
What is this dude smoking?
Edimensional sold a product exactly like this about ten years ago, they probably still do. It was a box that you hooked up to your tv to make everything, movies, broadcast tv, etc.. 3D. From what I remember it sucked.
These glasses worked at any refresh rate, they synced directly to the display through a special splitter along the VGA signal. They died exactly at the same time as every other active 3D glasses when we switched displays from high refresh rate (100Hz+) analog CRTs to strict 60Hz digital LCD monitors and TVs.
I never tried Edimensional's glasses, but I did own the Nvidia 3D Revelator glasses. They were ugly as hell and used expendable button cell batteries, but they worked very well. Lots of great memories of playing the original Unreal Tournament in stereo 3D using the old legacy Nvidia 3D drivers on my Riva TNT2 32 Ultra. Good old times...
I did try them again a few years later when I bought one of the first "fast response" LCD monitors (Samsung 226BW), it didn't work that well. The 60Hz blinking was particularly horrible.
Passive 3D forever
110" DIY dual-projection system
2x Epson EH-TW3500 (1080p) + Linear Polarizers (SPAR)
XtremScreen Daylight 2.0
VNS Geobox501 signal converter
The eDimensional glasses didn't really suck but the support sucked for them. I owned a first generation of edimensonal glasses but I stopped using them when switched to LCD. Back then many games worked out of the box because they were not using lighting, ambient occlusion and other effects that are now broken in every game.
Intel i7 8086K
Gigabyte GTX 1080Ti Aorus Extreme
DDR4 2x8gb 3200mhz Cl14
TV LG OLED65E6V
Windows 10 64bits
is more like to work with nvidia gpu and not everything else unless it does cinema mode on it's vr.
i did say above $300 u.s. dollars, unless nvidia want to make it cheap.
okay, i might have misread your post. well if it does comes out, nvidia is not giving out for free anyway.
i don't see a 3d converter box on their site, just the glasses.
They had much more products on this time:
https://web.archive.org/web/20100305233334/http://www.edimensional.com:80/index.php?cPath=21
I personally had the "E-D Wired 3D Glasses for the PC". It was coming with a software, but it was not so effective than the nvidia stereoscopic driver (the 3Dvison ancestor) witch I used with the e-dimensional glasses.
The 3DFury was primarily targeted at Projector issues and has a lot of features, but is also pretty pricey.
http://www.3dfury.eu/specs.html