TVs that are not listed in the compatibility list are not tested and approved by NVIDIA, so it may or may not work. its better you go according to the TVs that are in the compatibility list!
TVs that are not listed in the compatibility list are not tested and approved by NVIDIA, so it may or may not work. its better you go according to the TVs that are in the compatibility list!
Out of the 100's of 3D tv's on or recently on the market, frustratingly that compatibility list has only a very small portion of them. The problem per-say is not entirely Nvidia's fault - they could not possibly test them all - and if they did request information from the OEM's so they could include their models on the list - it still would be up to the OEM's to provide the information to Nvidia. (strike 1)
Forgetting of course that since the late 90's almost all display hardware that could be attached to a PC has a little serial ROM embedded in the hardware that allows the PC to read Manufacturer/Model/display capabilities directly from the Monitor itself. Sans not having that hardware (or the ability to read it), (strike 2) Windows OS's can import .INF files which will tell it the needed information. Sadly, I can't think of a single TV OEM that provides a disk (or otherwise) with this information or one that provides it via download from their website. (strike 3)
Simply Google "EDID OVERRIDE" and you'll turn up a .INF file that more than likely will work with active 3D glasses TV.
Out of the 100's of 3D tv's on or recently on the market, frustratingly that compatibility list has only a very small portion of them. The problem per-say is not entirely Nvidia's fault - they could not possibly test them all - and if they did request information from the OEM's so they could include their models on the list - it still would be up to the OEM's to provide the information to Nvidia. (strike 1)
Forgetting of course that since the late 90's almost all display hardware that could be attached to a PC has a little serial ROM embedded in the hardware that allows the PC to read Manufacturer/Model/display capabilities directly from the Monitor itself. Sans not having that hardware (or the ability to read it), (strike 2) Windows OS's can import .INF files which will tell it the needed information. Sadly, I can't think of a single TV OEM that provides a disk (or otherwise) with this information or one that provides it via download from their website. (strike 3)
Simply Google "EDID OVERRIDE" and you'll turn up a .INF file that more than likely will work with active 3D glasses TV.
People who don't know better assume that any TV that isn't on the requirement list is known to not work with Nvidia software, perhaps a logical assumption but wrong. TVs on the list have been tested and known to work, but ten times that many are not on the list and they work just fine, they just haven't been tested. Like the 2010 and some 2011 Samsungs.
I don't blame Nvidia for listing only TVs they have tested, they can't test every model out there. I do blame Nvidia for not putting a note on the requirements page stating that TVs not listed may or may not work.
People who don't know better assume that any TV that isn't on the requirement list is known to not work with Nvidia software, perhaps a logical assumption but wrong. TVs on the list have been tested and known to work, but ten times that many are not on the list and they work just fine, they just haven't been tested. Like the 2010 and some 2011 Samsungs.
I don't blame Nvidia for listing only TVs they have tested, they can't test every model out there. I do blame Nvidia for not putting a note on the requirements page stating that TVs not listed may or may not work.
i been looking at the list of compatible TVs
it lists that Samsung UA55D6000 is compatible
what about the UA32D6000?
and can anyone tell me if these TV's work well with a computers?
i been looking at the list of compatible TVs
it lists that Samsung UA55D6000 is compatible
what about the UA32D6000?
and can anyone tell me if these TV's work well with a computers?
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Forgetting of course that since the late 90's almost all display hardware that could be attached to a PC has a little serial ROM embedded in the hardware that allows the PC to read Manufacturer/Model/display capabilities directly from the Monitor itself. Sans not having that hardware (or the ability to read it), (strike 2) Windows OS's can import .INF files which will tell it the needed information. Sadly, I can't think of a single TV OEM that provides a disk (or otherwise) with this information or one that provides it via download from their website. (strike 3)
Simply Google "EDID OVERRIDE" and you'll turn up a .INF file that more than likely will work with active 3D glasses TV.
Forgetting of course that since the late 90's almost all display hardware that could be attached to a PC has a little serial ROM embedded in the hardware that allows the PC to read Manufacturer/Model/display capabilities directly from the Monitor itself. Sans not having that hardware (or the ability to read it), (strike 2) Windows OS's can import .INF files which will tell it the needed information. Sadly, I can't think of a single TV OEM that provides a disk (or otherwise) with this information or one that provides it via download from their website. (strike 3)
Simply Google "EDID OVERRIDE" and you'll turn up a .INF file that more than likely will work with active 3D glasses TV.
i7-2600K-4.5Ghz/Corsair H100i/8GB/GTX780SC-SLI/Win7-64/1200W-PSU/Samsung 840-500GB SSD/Coolermaster-Tower/Benq 1080ST @ 100"
I don't blame Nvidia for listing only TVs they have tested, they can't test every model out there. I do blame Nvidia for not putting a note on the requirements page stating that TVs not listed may or may not work.
I don't blame Nvidia for listing only TVs they have tested, they can't test every model out there. I do blame Nvidia for not putting a note on the requirements page stating that TVs not listed may or may not work.