some of them work , but with many i get a codec error "can not render streams" or something. (toy story 3 and tron trailer)and it says that it cant open the file. Im stumped. And yes I have the latest version
some of them work , but with many i get a codec error "can not render streams" or something. (toy story 3 and tron trailer)and it says that it cant open the file. Im stumped. And yes I have the latest version
I had an issue with some of them as well, but i would just get "windows encountered an error etc" this was on toy story 3 and tron plus another one i cant remember the name of, i already have klite installed. In the end i installed [url="http://www.3dtv.at/Downloads/Index_en.aspx"]this[/url] (first link) which looks exactly the same as Nvidia's one but played those vids fine.
I had an issue with some of them as well, but i would just get "windows encountered an error etc" this was on toy story 3 and tron plus another one i cant remember the name of, i already have klite installed. In the end i installed this (first link) which looks exactly the same as Nvidia's one but played those vids fine.
Asus Crosshair V Formula Motherboard
AMD Athlon FX8350 X8 Black Edition
G.Skill Ripjawz 16GB DDR3 12800
1x128GB & 2x256GB OCZ Agility 4 SSD
Zotac 770GTX 4GB
SupremeFX X-Fi 2 Audio Card
Asus VG278HE
Nvidia 3D Vision Glasses
Windows 7 Ultimate 64bit
that did work, thanx. Although I have to say im unimpressed with the 3d that I see in the player. Especially the toy story one. It seems like there is no real depth to most of these clips. Is there any way to adjust convergence other than the "shift and arrow key". I guess Im spoiled by 3d gaming that I expected more. BTW I havent seen any new 3d movie in theaters. can anyone compare, say, toy story 3d to a game like LFD2 in terms of the depth of 3d?
that did work, thanx. Although I have to say im unimpressed with the 3d that I see in the player. Especially the toy story one. It seems like there is no real depth to most of these clips. Is there any way to adjust convergence other than the "shift and arrow key". I guess Im spoiled by 3d gaming that I expected more. BTW I havent seen any new 3d movie in theaters. can anyone compare, say, toy story 3d to a game like LFD2 in terms of the depth of 3d?
[quote name='Caper70' post='1095719' date='Jul 29 2010, 06:51 PM']that did work, thanx. Although I have to say im unimpressed with the 3d that I see in the player. Especially the toy story one. It seems like there is no real depth to most of these clips. Is there any way to adjust convergence other than the "shift and arrow key". I guess Im spoiled by 3d gaming that I expected more. BTW I havent seen any new 3d movie in theaters. can anyone compare, say, toy story 3d to a game like LFD2 in terms of the depth of 3d?[/quote]
I know what you mean, i wasnt overly impressed with those vids, games just seem to suit 3D better, lol.
I saw toy story 3 at the cinema last weekend with the kids, that was using the polarised glasses, it looks ok but nothing spectacular, in fact i noticed quite a bit of ghosting as well. In terms of depth, games look much better. Such a shame you cant control depth/convergence on video :(
Back in the day when 3D wasn't used as much it seemed much better, i think this is a combination of the fact that before, all 3D video was made with stuff poking out at you in a cheesy gimmick way, but now they are just normal films that dont take advantage of the 3D as much (but with the exception of a few no doubt) makes sense because not everyone wants to watch it in 3D on DVD.
But then the 3D games came out which were just so much better its like we have been spoiled, video just looked good before because we hadnt seen anything better.
[quote name='Caper70' post='1095719' date='Jul 29 2010, 06:51 PM']that did work, thanx. Although I have to say im unimpressed with the 3d that I see in the player. Especially the toy story one. It seems like there is no real depth to most of these clips. Is there any way to adjust convergence other than the "shift and arrow key". I guess Im spoiled by 3d gaming that I expected more. BTW I havent seen any new 3d movie in theaters. can anyone compare, say, toy story 3d to a game like LFD2 in terms of the depth of 3d?
I know what you mean, i wasnt overly impressed with those vids, games just seem to suit 3D better, lol.
I saw toy story 3 at the cinema last weekend with the kids, that was using the polarised glasses, it looks ok but nothing spectacular, in fact i noticed quite a bit of ghosting as well. In terms of depth, games look much better. Such a shame you cant control depth/convergence on video :(
Back in the day when 3D wasn't used as much it seemed much better, i think this is a combination of the fact that before, all 3D video was made with stuff poking out at you in a cheesy gimmick way, but now they are just normal films that dont take advantage of the 3D as much (but with the exception of a few no doubt) makes sense because not everyone wants to watch it in 3D on DVD.
But then the 3D games came out which were just so much better its like we have been spoiled, video just looked good before because we hadnt seen anything better.
Asus Crosshair V Formula Motherboard
AMD Athlon FX8350 X8 Black Edition
G.Skill Ripjawz 16GB DDR3 12800
1x128GB & 2x256GB OCZ Agility 4 SSD
Zotac 770GTX 4GB
SupremeFX X-Fi 2 Audio Card
Asus VG278HE
Nvidia 3D Vision Glasses
Windows 7 Ultimate 64bit
With video you can control convergence (the image shift setting).
What you cannot control is separation (the total depth+pop-out amount).
The main problem with video is that it has to be calibrated for a fixed screen size, for movies the screen size is the big cinema/Imax screen.
The picture looks great on a huge screen but it suffers a lot when scaling it down to 22" or 24" screen size.
Recordings made for TV will have much more depth since they are calibrated for a 60-80" screen size. The downscaling from TV to 22-24" is not as brutal as the one from gigantic IMAX.
With video you can control convergence (the image shift setting).
What you cannot control is separation (the total depth+pop-out amount).
The main problem with video is that it has to be calibrated for a fixed screen size, for movies the screen size is the big cinema/Imax screen.
The picture looks great on a huge screen but it suffers a lot when scaling it down to 22" or 24" screen size.
Recordings made for TV will have much more depth since they are calibrated for a 60-80" screen size. The downscaling from TV to 22-24" is not as brutal as the one from gigantic IMAX.
Passive 3D forever
110" DIY dual-projection system
2x Epson EH-TW3500 (1080p) + Linear Polarizers (SPAR)
XtremScreen Daylight 2.0
VNS Geobox501 signal converter
[url="http://3dvisionvideos.blogspot.com/"]http://3dvisionvideos.blogspot.com/[/url]
some of them work , but with many i get a codec error "can not render streams" or something. (toy story 3 and tron trailer)and it says that it cant open the file. Im stumped. And yes I have the latest version
thanks
http://3dvisionvideos.blogspot.com/
some of them work , but with many i get a codec error "can not render streams" or something. (toy story 3 and tron trailer)and it says that it cant open the file. Im stumped. And yes I have the latest version
thanks
Mb: Asus P5W DH Deluxe
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3D:100" passive projector polarized setup + 22" IZ3D
Stereodrivers: Iz3d & Tridef ignition and nvidia old school.
Asus Crosshair V Formula Motherboard
AMD Athlon FX8350 X8 Black Edition
G.Skill Ripjawz 16GB DDR3 12800
1x128GB & 2x256GB OCZ Agility 4 SSD
Zotac 770GTX 4GB
SupremeFX X-Fi 2 Audio Card
Asus VG278HE
Nvidia 3D Vision Glasses
Windows 7 Ultimate 64bit
Current Rig: |Intel Core i7 920 @ 3.6GHz, EVGA X58 Classified 4-way SLI, 6 GB ram, Geforce GTX670| -> |Acer H5360 + Nvidia 3D Vision|
I know what you mean, i wasnt overly impressed with those vids, games just seem to suit 3D better, lol.
I saw toy story 3 at the cinema last weekend with the kids, that was using the polarised glasses, it looks ok but nothing spectacular, in fact i noticed quite a bit of ghosting as well. In terms of depth, games look much better. Such a shame you cant control depth/convergence on video :(
Back in the day when 3D wasn't used as much it seemed much better, i think this is a combination of the fact that before, all 3D video was made with stuff poking out at you in a cheesy gimmick way, but now they are just normal films that dont take advantage of the 3D as much (but with the exception of a few no doubt) makes sense because not everyone wants to watch it in 3D on DVD.
But then the 3D games came out which were just so much better its like we have been spoiled, video just looked good before because we hadnt seen anything better.
I know what you mean, i wasnt overly impressed with those vids, games just seem to suit 3D better, lol.
I saw toy story 3 at the cinema last weekend with the kids, that was using the polarised glasses, it looks ok but nothing spectacular, in fact i noticed quite a bit of ghosting as well. In terms of depth, games look much better. Such a shame you cant control depth/convergence on video :(
Back in the day when 3D wasn't used as much it seemed much better, i think this is a combination of the fact that before, all 3D video was made with stuff poking out at you in a cheesy gimmick way, but now they are just normal films that dont take advantage of the 3D as much (but with the exception of a few no doubt) makes sense because not everyone wants to watch it in 3D on DVD.
But then the 3D games came out which were just so much better its like we have been spoiled, video just looked good before because we hadnt seen anything better.
Asus Crosshair V Formula Motherboard
AMD Athlon FX8350 X8 Black Edition
G.Skill Ripjawz 16GB DDR3 12800
1x128GB & 2x256GB OCZ Agility 4 SSD
Zotac 770GTX 4GB
SupremeFX X-Fi 2 Audio Card
Asus VG278HE
Nvidia 3D Vision Glasses
Windows 7 Ultimate 64bit
What you cannot control is separation (the total depth+pop-out amount).
The main problem with video is that it has to be calibrated for a fixed screen size, for movies the screen size is the big cinema/Imax screen.
The picture looks great on a huge screen but it suffers a lot when scaling it down to 22" or 24" screen size.
Recordings made for TV will have much more depth since they are calibrated for a 60-80" screen size. The downscaling from TV to 22-24" is not as brutal as the one from gigantic IMAX.
What you cannot control is separation (the total depth+pop-out amount).
The main problem with video is that it has to be calibrated for a fixed screen size, for movies the screen size is the big cinema/Imax screen.
The picture looks great on a huge screen but it suffers a lot when scaling it down to 22" or 24" screen size.
Recordings made for TV will have much more depth since they are calibrated for a 60-80" screen size. The downscaling from TV to 22-24" is not as brutal as the one from gigantic IMAX.
Passive 3D forever
110" DIY dual-projection system
2x Epson EH-TW3500 (1080p) + Linear Polarizers (SPAR)
XtremScreen Daylight 2.0
VNS Geobox501 signal converter