Is there a way you can use the glassesdelayplus and glassesdelayminus registry keys to control the timing of the glasses, and therefore reduce some kinds of ghosting?
Is there a way you can use the glassesdelayplus and glassesdelayminus registry keys to control the timing of the glasses, and therefore reduce some kinds of ghosting?
Thanks
Nick
Twitter: @Dr_Inkduff
<b>Processor:</b> Intel Core i7 920 D0 (4Ghz) <b>Motherboard:</b> ASUS P6T
OK, read even more about this, and I discovered a few things:
1. The functionality of GlassesDelayPlus, GlassesDelayMinus, and GlassesSwitchDelay was disabled in newer versions of the drivers. They no longer work, but used to.
2. The functionality of GlassesDelayPlus, GlassesDelayMinus was controlled with the value of GlassesSwitchDelay (if it was 0, the others were disabled, 1 would enable them)
3. When GlassesSwitchDelay was enabled, pressing Alt-equals and Alt-minus would adjust the timing of the shutters, which is what most of us want access to atm.
I ask anyone at nVidia that is reading this, is it possible to re-enable the functionality of these registry keys?
I understand that what you want, is that the product will work well by default, and that you do not want users to have to adjust this manually... But is there any harm in enabling it for us? So until your product does work perfectly by default, we can make it work better, with a little manual tinkering?
Maybe we could help find trends for you to use in the drivers (ie, CRT's require this timing, LCD's work best with this timing, and DLP's work well with this timing...)
All I want is to delay the glasses by 1/220th of a second (I use a CRT at 110Hz) so rather than the shutters being timed for the 1st pixel on the screen, they are timed for the center of the screen, so the bottom of my screen does not get reversed...
Please reply, somebody from nvidia, and any other users that want this to be implemented.
OK, read even more about this, and I discovered a few things:
1. The functionality of GlassesDelayPlus, GlassesDelayMinus, and GlassesSwitchDelay was disabled in newer versions of the drivers. They no longer work, but used to.
2. The functionality of GlassesDelayPlus, GlassesDelayMinus was controlled with the value of GlassesSwitchDelay (if it was 0, the others were disabled, 1 would enable them)
3. When GlassesSwitchDelay was enabled, pressing Alt-equals and Alt-minus would adjust the timing of the shutters, which is what most of us want access to atm.
I ask anyone at nVidia that is reading this, is it possible to re-enable the functionality of these registry keys?
I understand that what you want, is that the product will work well by default, and that you do not want users to have to adjust this manually... But is there any harm in enabling it for us? So until your product does work perfectly by default, we can make it work better, with a little manual tinkering?
Maybe we could help find trends for you to use in the drivers (ie, CRT's require this timing, LCD's work best with this timing, and DLP's work well with this timing...)
All I want is to delay the glasses by 1/220th of a second (I use a CRT at 110Hz) so rather than the shutters being timed for the 1st pixel on the screen, they are timed for the center of the screen, so the bottom of my screen does not get reversed...
Please reply, somebody from nvidia, and any other users that want this to be implemented.
Thanks
Nick
Twitter: @Dr_Inkduff
<b>Processor:</b> Intel Core i7 920 D0 (4Ghz) <b>Motherboard:</b> ASUS P6T
Really, this is a joke if the $200 3D Vision glasses can't handle 120Hz without all sorts of ghosting/sync issues. I mean, I was able to get the Another Eye 2000 shutter glasses (which I got for $10) to reach 170Hz on a standard CRT and it looked great. No flicker, no ghosting, perfect sync. Its really sad if Nvidia's $200 kit can't even compare to a pair of $10 shutters from 5 years ago.
Really, this is a joke if the $200 3D Vision glasses can't handle 120Hz without all sorts of ghosting/sync issues. I mean, I was able to get the Another Eye 2000 shutter glasses (which I got for $10) to reach 170Hz on a standard CRT and it looked great. No flicker, no ghosting, perfect sync. Its really sad if Nvidia's $200 kit can't even compare to a pair of $10 shutters from 5 years ago.
Thanks
Nick
Thanks
Nick
Twitter: @Dr_Inkduff
<b>Processor:</b> Intel Core i7 920 D0 (4Ghz) <b>Motherboard:</b> ASUS P6T
<b>Memory:</b> 6GB DDR3 RAM (Kingston) <b>Graphics:</b> GTX 260 (216 cores, physX); EVGA GTX 480 SC
<b>OS:</b> Win7 Home Premium 64-bit / Vista Home Premium 64-bit
<b>Hard Disks:</b> 750GB + 500GB <b>Tower:</b> Antec 'Twelve Hundred' Gaming Tower
<b>Monitors:</b> 24" ACER GD245HQbd 120Hz 1920*1080 + 22" widescreen LCD 1680x1050
http://bit.ly/Bluesteel
1. The functionality of GlassesDelayPlus, GlassesDelayMinus, and GlassesSwitchDelay was disabled in newer versions of the drivers. They no longer work, but used to.
2. The functionality of GlassesDelayPlus, GlassesDelayMinus was controlled with the value of GlassesSwitchDelay (if it was 0, the others were disabled, 1 would enable them)
3. When GlassesSwitchDelay was enabled, pressing Alt-equals and Alt-minus would adjust the timing of the shutters, which is what most of us want access to atm.
I ask anyone at nVidia that is reading this, is it possible to re-enable the functionality of these registry keys?
I understand that what you want, is that the product will work well by default, and that you do not want users to have to adjust this manually... But is there any harm in enabling it for us? So until your product does work perfectly by default, we can make it work better, with a little manual tinkering?
Maybe we could help find trends for you to use in the drivers (ie, CRT's require this timing, LCD's work best with this timing, and DLP's work well with this timing...)
All I want is to delay the glasses by 1/220th of a second (I use a CRT at 110Hz) so rather than the shutters being timed for the 1st pixel on the screen, they are timed for the center of the screen, so the bottom of my screen does not get reversed...
Please reply, somebody from nvidia, and any other users that want this to be implemented.
Thanks
Nick
1. The functionality of GlassesDelayPlus, GlassesDelayMinus, and GlassesSwitchDelay was disabled in newer versions of the drivers. They no longer work, but used to.
2. The functionality of GlassesDelayPlus, GlassesDelayMinus was controlled with the value of GlassesSwitchDelay (if it was 0, the others were disabled, 1 would enable them)
3. When GlassesSwitchDelay was enabled, pressing Alt-equals and Alt-minus would adjust the timing of the shutters, which is what most of us want access to atm.
I ask anyone at nVidia that is reading this, is it possible to re-enable the functionality of these registry keys?
I understand that what you want, is that the product will work well by default, and that you do not want users to have to adjust this manually... But is there any harm in enabling it for us? So until your product does work perfectly by default, we can make it work better, with a little manual tinkering?
Maybe we could help find trends for you to use in the drivers (ie, CRT's require this timing, LCD's work best with this timing, and DLP's work well with this timing...)
All I want is to delay the glasses by 1/220th of a second (I use a CRT at 110Hz) so rather than the shutters being timed for the 1st pixel on the screen, they are timed for the center of the screen, so the bottom of my screen does not get reversed...
Please reply, somebody from nvidia, and any other users that want this to be implemented.
Thanks
Nick
Twitter: @Dr_Inkduff
<b>Processor:</b> Intel Core i7 920 D0 (4Ghz) <b>Motherboard:</b> ASUS P6T
<b>Memory:</b> 6GB DDR3 RAM (Kingston) <b>Graphics:</b> GTX 260 (216 cores, physX); EVGA GTX 480 SC
<b>OS:</b> Win7 Home Premium 64-bit / Vista Home Premium 64-bit
<b>Hard Disks:</b> 750GB + 500GB <b>Tower:</b> Antec 'Twelve Hundred' Gaming Tower
<b>Monitors:</b> 24" ACER GD245HQbd 120Hz 1920*1080 + 22" widescreen LCD 1680x1050
http://bit.ly/Bluesteel
check my blog - cybereality.com
Twitter: @Dr_Inkduff
<b>Processor:</b> Intel Core i7 920 D0 (4Ghz) <b>Motherboard:</b> ASUS P6T
<b>Memory:</b> 6GB DDR3 RAM (Kingston) <b>Graphics:</b> GTX 260 (216 cores, physX); EVGA GTX 480 SC
<b>OS:</b> Win7 Home Premium 64-bit / Vista Home Premium 64-bit
<b>Hard Disks:</b> 750GB + 500GB <b>Tower:</b> Antec 'Twelve Hundred' Gaming Tower
<b>Monitors:</b> 24" ACER GD245HQbd 120Hz 1920*1080 + 22" widescreen LCD 1680x1050
http://bit.ly/Bluesteel