Please help!!...I´ve recently bought a Sony Vaio VPCF236FM, Core i7, GeForce w/CUDA, nVidia GeForce GT 540M, FullHD 1080p, Win7, etc., also I bought 3D Vision 2 Kit to experience 3D capabilities but 3D STEREOSCOPIC option in NVIDIA Control Panel WON´T show up, I´ve installed latest drivers, the green light in the IR Emitter is ON, but nothing!!...Without that option wont be able to play and see 3D movies and games in my notebook?
Please help!!...I´ve recently bought a Sony Vaio VPCF236FM, Core i7, GeForce w/CUDA, nVidia GeForce GT 540M, FullHD 1080p, Win7, etc., also I bought 3D Vision 2 Kit to experience 3D capabilities but 3D STEREOSCOPIC option in NVIDIA Control Panel WON´T show up, I´ve installed latest drivers, the green light in the IR Emitter is ON, but nothing!!...Without that option wont be able to play and see 3D movies and games in my notebook?
Can you try downloading and installing #34 here: http://sonyvaiodriver.com/sony-vaio-vpcf236fm-windows-7-64-bit-drivers/
About a year ago, Nvidia removed 3D functionality from their Verde drivers at the request of notebook OEMs, the problem is, these same OEMs are now responsible for providing drivers that enable 3D and they do a poor job of it. We get this all the time around here now.
If this works for you please be sure to close the loop as it may help someone in a similar position.
Can you try downloading and installing #34 here: http://sonyvaiodriver.com/sony-vaio-vpcf236fm-windows-7-64-bit-drivers/
About a year ago, Nvidia removed 3D functionality from their Verde drivers at the request of notebook OEMs, the problem is, these same OEMs are now responsible for providing drivers that enable 3D and they do a poor job of it. We get this all the time around here now.
If this works for you please be sure to close the loop as it may help someone in a similar position.
[quote name='HellZpawn' date='23 January 2012 - 03:31 PM' timestamp='1327354299' post='1359664']
Thanks chiz, but did not work, any more ideas?...I´ve tried installing older drives old 3D Vision and no success...
I am having the same problem. I have tried many different drivers. ALL do NOT have the stereoscopic options in the control panel. I have had to use 3rd party drivers for all my 3d needs. Toshiba is the manufacturer of my laptop with them advertising that it works with the nvidia drivers having an autostereoscopic display. Out of the box the "enable stereoscopic" was listed under the start menu, (it was not functional) and it wasnt in the nvidia control panel. I updated the drivers as per their website to version 290.39 which was supposed to fix these issues. But it still didnt show up. Installed the most recent beta drivers... but still doesnt show up. If anyone have any suggestions or know how to fix this I would greatly appreciate it. I am using the GeForce GT540M thanks.
I am having the same problem. I have tried many different drivers. ALL do NOT have the stereoscopic options in the control panel. I have had to use 3rd party drivers for all my 3d needs. Toshiba is the manufacturer of my laptop with them advertising that it works with the nvidia drivers having an autostereoscopic display. Out of the box the "enable stereoscopic" was listed under the start menu, (it was not functional) and it wasnt in the nvidia control panel. I updated the drivers as per their website to version 290.39 which was supposed to fix these issues. But it still didnt show up. Installed the most recent beta drivers... but still doesnt show up. If anyone have any suggestions or know how to fix this I would greatly appreciate it. I am using the GeForce GT540M thanks.
[quote name='andrewf@nvidia' date='24 January 2012 - 05:22 AM' timestamp='1327382558' post='1359797']
What display are you connecting too?
[/quote]
I have the same problem with my Samsung RC530 notebook (GT540M, optimus) and the Acer hn274h 3D vision screen,
connected via HDMI (1.4a I suppose).
It seems, that the HDMI output is wired to the intel graphics (WHY?!?!?) and the
nvidia graphics cannot use the intel frame buffer to forward the image (another WHY?!?!).
I also tried several drivers and still stuck. The 3D vision stuff doesn't even
install from the driver pack (no option to check in the installer),
I have to run the .exe separately.
The problem lies in the compatibility issue between 3D and Optimus, this has to be sorted out first by Nvidia.
Yep. I got burned with a Lenovo Y570 which Nvidia claims is supported by 3D Vision. Tried it with a Panasonic 3D TV and also a Viewsonic DLP projector. Doesn't even matter cause the stereoscopic option is nowhere to be found. Honestly, I am going AMD next time.
Yep. I got burned with a Lenovo Y570 which Nvidia claims is supported by 3D Vision. Tried it with a Panasonic 3D TV and also a Viewsonic DLP projector. Doesn't even matter cause the stereoscopic option is nowhere to be found. Honestly, I am going AMD next time.
I have the same problem with a 570M connected to a samsung UE40D6510 with a HDMI-HDMI cable. It works if I use my desktop with a regular 570 GTX but not with the notebook, there is no stereoscopic 3d in Nvidia Control Panel.
Tried with 275.50 recommended [url="http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=203162"]here[/url] and the latest notebook drivers (is it?) 285.62.
I have the same problem with a 570M connected to a samsung UE40D6510 with a HDMI-HDMI cable. It works if I use my desktop with a regular 570 GTX but not with the notebook, there is no stereoscopic 3d in Nvidia Control Panel.
Tried with 275.50 recommended here and the latest notebook drivers (is it?) 285.62.
Same here with me. I’m using a Acer 5750G laptop, Nvidia 540M Graphics processor, Windows 7 64 bit with all updates, Nvidia display driver 295.73 released Feb 2012, but from reading on the internet it affects all makes of laptops. It’s also an i7 processor with specs well ahead of 3D requirements. HDMI to HDMI using high speed 3D capable 1.5 metre HDMI 1.4a lead. 3D should work with an i3 for that matter, most modern Intel laptops within the last 2 years should work with it.
I’ve temporarily given up trying to get the glasses to work with the computer monitor/TV, which is a ViewSonic V3D245 computer monitor with built in Nvidia 3d communicator and equipped with the glasses. It was manufactured and first available in November 2011. It is a perfect monitor with really good picture and of course as it’s a 3d TV it will work in the future, with any software that’s designed for 3D and if Nvidia ever in the future fix their software design it will eventually work, otherwise it would work with another software company that may write software for people that can’t use the Nvidia software because they left off the stereoscopic option.
The glasses look like they respond very well with the TV, I even made it work for YouTube by using Roxio software, which detected the 3D capability and the Roxio software set the timing with the glasses and the TV monitor, but it’s difficult not being able to directly access any stereoscopic settings from the Nvidia control panel. Actually I think the Roxio cine player software included in Creator 2012 Pro may work with a 3D Blu-ray player. I don’t have a 3D bluray player yet to test it with, but it looks like it may be playable using Roxio software, although I think the plugin to allow playing Blu-ray movies may be currently not allowed in the UK due to some kind of copyright restrictions in UK, that don’t allow you to play your own bought or rented movies, but not the rest of the world. I think there is some software though that can let people watch blu ray movies on their computers though, including 3D Blu-ray.
Even though I’m using hdmi, so not technically not up to the 120Hz at 1080p, due to the current technical limitations of HDMI, which currently requires a dual dvi to send signals of 1080p at 120Hz, it would have been good if Nvidia had let people use their 3D capable laptops, pcs and TVs with YouTube in 3d which are mostly at rates capable of being used with HDMI or for 3D blu ray which runs at 60hz max, even for an NTSC video of 30fps. But by simply not enabling the control panel stereoscopic vision option means most people can’t change settings that do actually work in 3d. The only option that hdmi can’t cater for, is the 120hz at 1080p. It can cope with 60hz at 1080p and 120hz at 720p. In fact it’s only games that go up to 1080p at 120Hz anyway, as 3d TV in cinema mode only requires 48hz for a 24fps movie or 50hz for 3d at 25fps pal video. This option is simply an option on the software that Nvidia for some reason don’t allow people to access, making their 3d vision unworkable for the majority of people. But possibly in the future Nvidia may add a stereoscopic control option in the control panel when they get round to it.
Same here with me. I’m using a Acer 5750G laptop, Nvidia 540M Graphics processor, Windows 7 64 bit with all updates, Nvidia display driver 295.73 released Feb 2012, but from reading on the internet it affects all makes of laptops. It’s also an i7 processor with specs well ahead of 3D requirements. HDMI to HDMI using high speed 3D capable 1.5 metre HDMI 1.4a lead. 3D should work with an i3 for that matter, most modern Intel laptops within the last 2 years should work with it.
I’ve temporarily given up trying to get the glasses to work with the computer monitor/TV, which is a ViewSonic V3D245 computer monitor with built in Nvidia 3d communicator and equipped with the glasses. It was manufactured and first available in November 2011. It is a perfect monitor with really good picture and of course as it’s a 3d TV it will work in the future, with any software that’s designed for 3D and if Nvidia ever in the future fix their software design it will eventually work, otherwise it would work with another software company that may write software for people that can’t use the Nvidia software because they left off the stereoscopic option.
The glasses look like they respond very well with the TV, I even made it work for YouTube by using Roxio software, which detected the 3D capability and the Roxio software set the timing with the glasses and the TV monitor, but it’s difficult not being able to directly access any stereoscopic settings from the Nvidia control panel. Actually I think the Roxio cine player software included in Creator 2012 Pro may work with a 3D Blu-ray player. I don’t have a 3D bluray player yet to test it with, but it looks like it may be playable using Roxio software, although I think the plugin to allow playing Blu-ray movies may be currently not allowed in the UK due to some kind of copyright restrictions in UK, that don’t allow you to play your own bought or rented movies, but not the rest of the world. I think there is some software though that can let people watch blu ray movies on their computers though, including 3D Blu-ray.
Even though I’m using hdmi, so not technically not up to the 120Hz at 1080p, due to the current technical limitations of HDMI, which currently requires a dual dvi to send signals of 1080p at 120Hz, it would have been good if Nvidia had let people use their 3D capable laptops, pcs and TVs with YouTube in 3d which are mostly at rates capable of being used with HDMI or for 3D blu ray which runs at 60hz max, even for an NTSC video of 30fps. But by simply not enabling the control panel stereoscopic vision option means most people can’t change settings that do actually work in 3d. The only option that hdmi can’t cater for, is the 120hz at 1080p. It can cope with 60hz at 1080p and 120hz at 720p. In fact it’s only games that go up to 1080p at 120Hz anyway, as 3d TV in cinema mode only requires 48hz for a 24fps movie or 50hz for 3d at 25fps pal video. This option is simply an option on the software that Nvidia for some reason don’t allow people to access, making their 3d vision unworkable for the majority of people. But possibly in the future Nvidia may add a stereoscopic control option in the control panel when they get round to it.
The issue is common for laptops that use Nvidia Optimus technology (switchable graphics), most of these do not work in stereo 3D mode with external 3D-capable display as the external video outputs are usually being attached to the integrated Intel GPU and not to the discrete Nvidia one and the 3D Vision/3DTV Play driver apparently cannot work in this situation. There should be some laptops with Optimus technology that are not affected by this problem because the HDMI interface for example is attached directly to the Nvidia GPU, but I still haven't seen any of these... all models that I've tried with Optimus failed to work.
The issue is common for laptops that use Nvidia Optimus technology (switchable graphics), most of these do not work in stereo 3D mode with external 3D-capable display as the external video outputs are usually being attached to the integrated Intel GPU and not to the discrete Nvidia one and the 3D Vision/3DTV Play driver apparently cannot work in this situation. There should be some laptops with Optimus technology that are not affected by this problem because the HDMI interface for example is attached directly to the Nvidia GPU, but I still haven't seen any of these... all models that I've tried with Optimus failed to work.
Please anybody!!
Thanks!!
Please anybody!!
Thanks!!
About a year ago, Nvidia removed 3D functionality from their Verde drivers at the request of notebook OEMs, the problem is, these same OEMs are now responsible for providing drivers that enable 3D and they do a poor job of it. We get this all the time around here now.
If this works for you please be sure to close the loop as it may help someone in a similar position.
About a year ago, Nvidia removed 3D functionality from their Verde drivers at the request of notebook OEMs, the problem is, these same OEMs are now responsible for providing drivers that enable 3D and they do a poor job of it. We get this all the time around here now.
If this works for you please be sure to close the loop as it may help someone in a similar position.
-=HeliX=- Mod 3DV Game Fixes
My 3D Vision Games List Ratings
Intel Core i7 5930K @4.5GHz | Gigabyte X99 Gaming 5 | Win10 x64 Pro | Corsair H105
Nvidia GeForce Titan X SLI Hybrid | ROG Swift PG278Q 144Hz + 3D Vision/G-Sync | 32GB Adata DDR4 2666
Intel Samsung 950Pro SSD | Samsung EVO 4x1 RAID 0 |
Yamaha VX-677 A/V Receiver | Polk Audio RM6880 7.1 | LG Blu-Ray
Auzen X-Fi HT HD | Logitech G710/G502/G27 | Corsair Air 540 | EVGA P2-1200W
THANKS!!
THANKS!!
Thanks chiz, but did not work, any more ideas?...I´ve tried installing older drives old 3D Vision and no success...
THANKS!!
[/quote]
What display are you connecting too?
Thanks chiz, but did not work, any more ideas?...I´ve tried installing older drives old 3D Vision and no success...
THANKS!!
What display are you connecting too?
What display are you connecting too?
[/quote]
I have the same problem with my Samsung RC530 notebook (GT540M, optimus) and the Acer hn274h 3D vision screen,
connected via HDMI (1.4a I suppose).
It seems, that the HDMI output is wired to the intel graphics (WHY?!?!?) and the
nvidia graphics cannot use the intel frame buffer to forward the image (another WHY?!?!).
I also tried several drivers and still stuck. The 3D vision stuff doesn't even
install from the driver pack (no option to check in the installer),
I have to run the .exe separately.
The problem lies in the compatibility issue between 3D and Optimus, this has to be sorted out first by Nvidia.
What display are you connecting too?
I have the same problem with my Samsung RC530 notebook (GT540M, optimus) and the Acer hn274h 3D vision screen,
connected via HDMI (1.4a I suppose).
It seems, that the HDMI output is wired to the intel graphics (WHY?!?!?) and the
nvidia graphics cannot use the intel frame buffer to forward the image (another WHY?!?!).
I also tried several drivers and still stuck. The 3D vision stuff doesn't even
install from the driver pack (no option to check in the installer),
I have to run the .exe separately.
The problem lies in the compatibility issue between 3D and Optimus, this has to be sorted out first by Nvidia.
check my blog - cybereality.com
Tried with 275.50 recommended [url="http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=203162"]here[/url] and the latest notebook drivers (is it?) 285.62.
Tried with 275.50 recommended here and the latest notebook drivers (is it?) 285.62.
I’ve temporarily given up trying to get the glasses to work with the computer monitor/TV, which is a ViewSonic V3D245 computer monitor with built in Nvidia 3d communicator and equipped with the glasses. It was manufactured and first available in November 2011. It is a perfect monitor with really good picture and of course as it’s a 3d TV it will work in the future, with any software that’s designed for 3D and if Nvidia ever in the future fix their software design it will eventually work, otherwise it would work with another software company that may write software for people that can’t use the Nvidia software because they left off the stereoscopic option.
The glasses look like they respond very well with the TV, I even made it work for YouTube by using Roxio software, which detected the 3D capability and the Roxio software set the timing with the glasses and the TV monitor, but it’s difficult not being able to directly access any stereoscopic settings from the Nvidia control panel. Actually I think the Roxio cine player software included in Creator 2012 Pro may work with a 3D Blu-ray player. I don’t have a 3D bluray player yet to test it with, but it looks like it may be playable using Roxio software, although I think the plugin to allow playing Blu-ray movies may be currently not allowed in the UK due to some kind of copyright restrictions in UK, that don’t allow you to play your own bought or rented movies, but not the rest of the world. I think there is some software though that can let people watch blu ray movies on their computers though, including 3D Blu-ray.
Even though I’m using hdmi, so not technically not up to the 120Hz at 1080p, due to the current technical limitations of HDMI, which currently requires a dual dvi to send signals of 1080p at 120Hz, it would have been good if Nvidia had let people use their 3D capable laptops, pcs and TVs with YouTube in 3d which are mostly at rates capable of being used with HDMI or for 3D blu ray which runs at 60hz max, even for an NTSC video of 30fps. But by simply not enabling the control panel stereoscopic vision option means most people can’t change settings that do actually work in 3d. The only option that hdmi can’t cater for, is the 120hz at 1080p. It can cope with 60hz at 1080p and 120hz at 720p. In fact it’s only games that go up to 1080p at 120Hz anyway, as 3d TV in cinema mode only requires 48hz for a 24fps movie or 50hz for 3d at 25fps pal video. This option is simply an option on the software that Nvidia for some reason don’t allow people to access, making their 3d vision unworkable for the majority of people. But possibly in the future Nvidia may add a stereoscopic control option in the control panel when they get round to it.
I’ve temporarily given up trying to get the glasses to work with the computer monitor/TV, which is a ViewSonic V3D245 computer monitor with built in Nvidia 3d communicator and equipped with the glasses. It was manufactured and first available in November 2011. It is a perfect monitor with really good picture and of course as it’s a 3d TV it will work in the future, with any software that’s designed for 3D and if Nvidia ever in the future fix their software design it will eventually work, otherwise it would work with another software company that may write software for people that can’t use the Nvidia software because they left off the stereoscopic option.
The glasses look like they respond very well with the TV, I even made it work for YouTube by using Roxio software, which detected the 3D capability and the Roxio software set the timing with the glasses and the TV monitor, but it’s difficult not being able to directly access any stereoscopic settings from the Nvidia control panel. Actually I think the Roxio cine player software included in Creator 2012 Pro may work with a 3D Blu-ray player. I don’t have a 3D bluray player yet to test it with, but it looks like it may be playable using Roxio software, although I think the plugin to allow playing Blu-ray movies may be currently not allowed in the UK due to some kind of copyright restrictions in UK, that don’t allow you to play your own bought or rented movies, but not the rest of the world. I think there is some software though that can let people watch blu ray movies on their computers though, including 3D Blu-ray.
Even though I’m using hdmi, so not technically not up to the 120Hz at 1080p, due to the current technical limitations of HDMI, which currently requires a dual dvi to send signals of 1080p at 120Hz, it would have been good if Nvidia had let people use their 3D capable laptops, pcs and TVs with YouTube in 3d which are mostly at rates capable of being used with HDMI or for 3D blu ray which runs at 60hz max, even for an NTSC video of 30fps. But by simply not enabling the control panel stereoscopic vision option means most people can’t change settings that do actually work in 3d. The only option that hdmi can’t cater for, is the 120hz at 1080p. It can cope with 60hz at 1080p and 120hz at 720p. In fact it’s only games that go up to 1080p at 120Hz anyway, as 3d TV in cinema mode only requires 48hz for a 24fps movie or 50hz for 3d at 25fps pal video. This option is simply an option on the software that Nvidia for some reason don’t allow people to access, making their 3d vision unworkable for the majority of people. But possibly in the future Nvidia may add a stereoscopic control option in the control panel when they get round to it.
My 3D Vision Blog - 3dvision-blog.com