Well, i've never really tested it on games, but i was wondering if the 3D Vision can be only seen by the NVIDIA 3d glasses, or if it could be also seen using another LCD 3D glasses to have the same 3D effect.
If it just works with the Nvidia Glasses, what is the difference between the NVIDIA 3d glasses and the other 3D glasses (Also LCD).
Well, i've never really tested it on games, but i was wondering if the 3D Vision can be only seen by the NVIDIA 3d glasses, or if it could be also seen using another LCD 3D glasses to have the same 3D effect.
If it just works with the Nvidia Glasses, what is the difference between the NVIDIA 3d glasses and the other 3D glasses (Also LCD).
Well, there are other drivers to run 3D glasses. iZ3D and DDD are popular ones. However, only 3D Vision glasses work with the 3D Vision drivers that come with NVIDA display drivers. You might want to poke around [url=http://www.mtbs3d.com/m3ga/]M3GA[/url] for more info.
Well, there are other drivers to run 3D glasses. iZ3D and DDD are popular ones. However, only 3D Vision glasses work with the 3D Vision drivers that come with NVIDA display drivers. You might want to poke around M3GA for more info.
[quote name='Zloth' date='06 July 2011 - 10:01 PM' timestamp='1310000490' post='1261177']
Well, there are other drivers to run 3D glasses. iZ3D and DDD are popular ones. However, only 3D Vision glasses work with the 3D Vision drivers that come with NVIDA display drivers. You might want to poke around [url=http://www.mtbs3d.com/m3ga/]M3GA[/url] for more info.
[/quote]
I see, Thanks for the info ! /tongue.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':tongue:' />
But also my other question is if nvidia glasses behave in the same way than other 3D Glasses, the effect works the same way?
3D vision and 3rd party 3D movies are renderized in 3d with the same technology?
I know the basics of 3D rendering and was just wondering if the games are renderized the same way, and glasses blink in the same way, than other 3D glasses
[quote name='Zloth' date='06 July 2011 - 10:01 PM' timestamp='1310000490' post='1261177']
Well, there are other drivers to run 3D glasses. iZ3D and DDD are popular ones. However, only 3D Vision glasses work with the 3D Vision drivers that come with NVIDA display drivers. You might want to poke around M3GA for more info.
I see, Thanks for the info ! /tongue.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':tongue:' />
But also my other question is if nvidia glasses behave in the same way than other 3D Glasses, the effect works the same way?
3D vision and 3rd party 3D movies are renderized in 3d with the same technology?
I know the basics of 3D rendering and was just wondering if the games are renderized the same way, and glasses blink in the same way, than other 3D glasses
The sync signals are different.
The NVidia emitter is specific to the NVidia glasses.
The Panasonic emitter on Panasonic TV's is specific to Panasonic glasses.
The Sony emitter on Sony TV's is specific to Sony glasses.
etc etc etc.
Basically every manufacturer designed their own protocol and glasses are for the most part manufacturer specific.
There are several groups currently trying to establish a standard for active shutter glasses.
My guess is they'll have been relegated to a niche market by the time that actually happens.
A lot of TV manufacturers are moving forwards with Passive technologies.
[quote name='ERP' date='07 July 2011 - 03:45 PM' timestamp='1310064324' post='1261508']
The sync signals are different.
The NVidia emitter is specific to the NVidia glasses.
The Panasonic emitter on Panasonic TV's is specific to Panasonic glasses.
The Sony emitter on Sony TV's is specific to Sony glasses.
etc etc etc.
Basically every manufacturer designed their own protocol and glasses are for the most part manufacturer specific.
There are several groups currently trying to establish a standard for active shutter glasses.
My guess is they'll have been relegated to a niche market by the time that actually happens.
A lot of TV manufacturers are moving forwards with Passive technologies.
[/quote]
Well, i've never really tested it on games, but i was wondering if the 3D Vision can be only seen by the NVIDIA 3d glasses, or if it could be also seen using another LCD 3D glasses to have the same 3D effect.
If it just works with the Nvidia Glasses, what is the difference between the NVIDIA 3d glasses and the other 3D glasses (Also LCD).
Thanks.
Well, i've never really tested it on games, but i was wondering if the 3D Vision can be only seen by the NVIDIA 3d glasses, or if it could be also seen using another LCD 3D glasses to have the same 3D effect.
If it just works with the Nvidia Glasses, what is the difference between the NVIDIA 3d glasses and the other 3D glasses (Also LCD).
Thanks.
|Asus P8Z68-V|GeForce GTX 680|i7 2600k|Antec Kuhler 620|8GB Corsair Vegeance 1600|Corsair GS700|Haf 922|Benq XL2410T|
Well, there are other drivers to run 3D glasses. iZ3D and DDD are popular ones. However, only 3D Vision glasses work with the 3D Vision drivers that come with NVIDA display drivers. You might want to poke around [url=http://www.mtbs3d.com/m3ga/]M3GA[/url] for more info.
[/quote]
I see, Thanks for the info !
But also my other question is if nvidia glasses behave in the same way than other 3D Glasses, the effect works the same way?
3D vision and 3rd party 3D movies are renderized in 3d with the same technology?
I know the basics of 3D rendering and was just wondering if the games are renderized the same way, and glasses blink in the same way, than other 3D glasses
thanks for the help
Well, there are other drivers to run 3D glasses. iZ3D and DDD are popular ones. However, only 3D Vision glasses work with the 3D Vision drivers that come with NVIDA display drivers. You might want to poke around M3GA for more info.
I see, Thanks for the info !
But also my other question is if nvidia glasses behave in the same way than other 3D Glasses, the effect works the same way?
3D vision and 3rd party 3D movies are renderized in 3d with the same technology?
I know the basics of 3D rendering and was just wondering if the games are renderized the same way, and glasses blink in the same way, than other 3D glasses
thanks for the help
|Asus P8Z68-V|GeForce GTX 680|i7 2600k|Antec Kuhler 620|8GB Corsair Vegeance 1600|Corsair GS700|Haf 922|Benq XL2410T|
The NVidia emitter is specific to the NVidia glasses.
The Panasonic emitter on Panasonic TV's is specific to Panasonic glasses.
The Sony emitter on Sony TV's is specific to Sony glasses.
etc etc etc.
Basically every manufacturer designed their own protocol and glasses are for the most part manufacturer specific.
There are several groups currently trying to establish a standard for active shutter glasses.
My guess is they'll have been relegated to a niche market by the time that actually happens.
A lot of TV manufacturers are moving forwards with Passive technologies.
The NVidia emitter is specific to the NVidia glasses.
The Panasonic emitter on Panasonic TV's is specific to Panasonic glasses.
The Sony emitter on Sony TV's is specific to Sony glasses.
etc etc etc.
Basically every manufacturer designed their own protocol and glasses are for the most part manufacturer specific.
There are several groups currently trying to establish a standard for active shutter glasses.
My guess is they'll have been relegated to a niche market by the time that actually happens.
A lot of TV manufacturers are moving forwards with Passive technologies.
My Blog
wouldnt bet on that :D
[quote]We probably won’t see active-retarder-type 3D sets until next year, and they will be expensive.â€[/quote]
-pub 3d .
wouldnt bet on that :D
-pub 3d .
The sync signals are different.
The NVidia emitter is specific to the NVidia glasses.
The Panasonic emitter on Panasonic TV's is specific to Panasonic glasses.
The Sony emitter on Sony TV's is specific to Sony glasses.
etc etc etc.
Basically every manufacturer designed their own protocol and glasses are for the most part manufacturer specific.
There are several groups currently trying to establish a standard for active shutter glasses.
My guess is they'll have been relegated to a niche market by the time that actually happens.
A lot of TV manufacturers are moving forwards with Passive technologies.
[/quote]
Thanks so much for the answer!
The sync signals are different.
The NVidia emitter is specific to the NVidia glasses.
The Panasonic emitter on Panasonic TV's is specific to Panasonic glasses.
The Sony emitter on Sony TV's is specific to Sony glasses.
etc etc etc.
Basically every manufacturer designed their own protocol and glasses are for the most part manufacturer specific.
There are several groups currently trying to establish a standard for active shutter glasses.
My guess is they'll have been relegated to a niche market by the time that actually happens.
A lot of TV manufacturers are moving forwards with Passive technologies.
Thanks so much for the answer!
|Asus P8Z68-V|GeForce GTX 680|i7 2600k|Antec Kuhler 620|8GB Corsair Vegeance 1600|Corsair GS700|Haf 922|Benq XL2410T|