3D content on 3D TV with Nvidia
Hey all,

I have a question and I hope you guys can help me. I’m making 3D content but I don’t now how to put this on a 3D TV.

I work with Maya and I made a 3D animation video/picture renders, I can render this two times/stereo but after that I have a problem to put this together and show it on a 3D television.
So I was thinking, I buy a 3D TV, than I buy a 3D Vision kit from Nvidia. And after that I use the 3d tv play software and convert this and put it on the 3D tv.
But this is theory, I did not test this in reality.

Can somebody tell me if this gonna work or not.

So I have two 3D animation video’s and I want to put this on a 3D television.

Is this gonna work or not :rolleyes:

Grtzzz rob
Hey all,



I have a question and I hope you guys can help me. I’m making 3D content but I don’t now how to put this on a 3D TV.



I work with Maya and I made a 3D animation video/picture renders, I can render this two times/stereo but after that I have a problem to put this together and show it on a 3D television.

So I was thinking, I buy a 3D TV, than I buy a 3D Vision kit from Nvidia. And after that I use the 3d tv play software and convert this and put it on the 3D tv.

But this is theory, I did not test this in reality.



Can somebody tell me if this gonna work or not.



So I have two 3D animation video’s and I want to put this on a 3D television.



Is this gonna work or not :rolleyes:



Grtzzz rob

#1
Posted 10/21/2010 05:41 PM   
Hey all,

I have a question and I hope you guys can help me. I’m making 3D content but I don’t now how to put this on a 3D TV.

I work with Maya and I made a 3D animation video/picture renders, I can render this two times/stereo but after that I have a problem to put this together and show it on a 3D television.
So I was thinking, I buy a 3D TV, than I buy a 3D Vision kit from Nvidia. And after that I use the 3d tv play software and convert this and put it on the 3D tv.
But this is theory, I did not test this in reality.

Can somebody tell me if this gonna work or not.

So I have two 3D animation video’s and I want to put this on a 3D television.

Is this gonna work or not :rolleyes:

Grtzzz rob
Hey all,



I have a question and I hope you guys can help me. I’m making 3D content but I don’t now how to put this on a 3D TV.



I work with Maya and I made a 3D animation video/picture renders, I can render this two times/stereo but after that I have a problem to put this together and show it on a 3D television.

So I was thinking, I buy a 3D TV, than I buy a 3D Vision kit from Nvidia. And after that I use the 3d tv play software and convert this and put it on the 3D tv.

But this is theory, I did not test this in reality.



Can somebody tell me if this gonna work or not.



So I have two 3D animation video’s and I want to put this on a 3D television.



Is this gonna work or not :rolleyes:



Grtzzz rob

#2
Posted 10/21/2010 05:41 PM   
what you may want to do is render your animations in a tool that can encode them in the blu-ray 3d format (uses mpeg4-mvc), and try them out on a 3D-tv, and see if you're satisfied with the results. (what you may want to do probably is frameserve from the maya format into some tool.) If you buy a 3d tv, you don't need to buy the 3d vision kit, unless you want to try out the 3dtv play beta software right away, since the 3dtv play software will be sold standalone, later on, hopefully within 1 month. In fact, you don't even need the 3dtv play software for your purposes for testing because if you render into the blu-ray 3d format, you can use, powerdvd or something to directly play from your computer with the latest 260-series drivers in an hdmi 1.4 3d style to the 3d tv. Many TVs also have sd-card slots and embedded software to play [i]some [/i]types of 3d. Any lesser 3d formats, such as side-by-side half-res, or top-bottom half-res, should be no problem.

you may want to refer to some relevant information in this thread- [url="http://3dvision-blog.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=56&start=0"]http://3dvision-blog.com/forum/viewtopic.p...=56&start=0[/url]
what you may want to do is render your animations in a tool that can encode them in the blu-ray 3d format (uses mpeg4-mvc), and try them out on a 3D-tv, and see if you're satisfied with the results. (what you may want to do probably is frameserve from the maya format into some tool.) If you buy a 3d tv, you don't need to buy the 3d vision kit, unless you want to try out the 3dtv play beta software right away, since the 3dtv play software will be sold standalone, later on, hopefully within 1 month. In fact, you don't even need the 3dtv play software for your purposes for testing because if you render into the blu-ray 3d format, you can use, powerdvd or something to directly play from your computer with the latest 260-series drivers in an hdmi 1.4 3d style to the 3d tv. Many TVs also have sd-card slots and embedded software to play some types of 3d. Any lesser 3d formats, such as side-by-side half-res, or top-bottom half-res, should be no problem.



you may want to refer to some relevant information in this thread- http://3dvision-blog.com/forum/viewtopic.p...=56&start=0

#3
Posted 10/22/2010 03:20 AM   
what you may want to do is render your animations in a tool that can encode them in the blu-ray 3d format (uses mpeg4-mvc), and try them out on a 3D-tv, and see if you're satisfied with the results. (what you may want to do probably is frameserve from the maya format into some tool.) If you buy a 3d tv, you don't need to buy the 3d vision kit, unless you want to try out the 3dtv play beta software right away, since the 3dtv play software will be sold standalone, later on, hopefully within 1 month. In fact, you don't even need the 3dtv play software for your purposes for testing because if you render into the blu-ray 3d format, you can use, powerdvd or something to directly play from your computer with the latest 260-series drivers in an hdmi 1.4 3d style to the 3d tv. Many TVs also have sd-card slots and embedded software to play [i]some [/i]types of 3d. Any lesser 3d formats, such as side-by-side half-res, or top-bottom half-res, should be no problem.

you may want to refer to some relevant information in this thread- [url="http://3dvision-blog.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=56&start=0"]http://3dvision-blog.com/forum/viewtopic.p...=56&start=0[/url]
what you may want to do is render your animations in a tool that can encode them in the blu-ray 3d format (uses mpeg4-mvc), and try them out on a 3D-tv, and see if you're satisfied with the results. (what you may want to do probably is frameserve from the maya format into some tool.) If you buy a 3d tv, you don't need to buy the 3d vision kit, unless you want to try out the 3dtv play beta software right away, since the 3dtv play software will be sold standalone, later on, hopefully within 1 month. In fact, you don't even need the 3dtv play software for your purposes for testing because if you render into the blu-ray 3d format, you can use, powerdvd or something to directly play from your computer with the latest 260-series drivers in an hdmi 1.4 3d style to the 3d tv. Many TVs also have sd-card slots and embedded software to play some types of 3d. Any lesser 3d formats, such as side-by-side half-res, or top-bottom half-res, should be no problem.



you may want to refer to some relevant information in this thread- http://3dvision-blog.com/forum/viewtopic.p...=56&start=0

#4
Posted 10/22/2010 03:20 AM   
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