I'm curious how 3D Vision Surround will work with the HDTV's that are listed as compatible when each TV requires a 3 pin 3D sync connection, but 3D Vision only has (1) 3 pin sync connector. Hmmmm.... I'm glad I held off on buying 3 of those Mitsubishi 73" DLP's.
I'm curious how 3D Vision Surround will work with the HDTV's that are listed as compatible when each TV requires a 3 pin 3D sync connection, but 3D Vision only has (1) 3 pin sync connector. Hmmmm.... I'm glad I held off on buying 3 of those Mitsubishi 73" DLP's.
[quote name='Airhogg' post='1055157' date='May 13 2010, 05:51 PM']I'm curious how 3D Vision Surround will work with the HDTV's that are listed as compatible when each TV requires a 3 pin 3D sync connection, but 3D Vision only has (1) 3 pin sync connector. Hmmmm.... I'm glad I held off on buying 3 of those Mitsubishi 73" DLP's.[/quote]
And no driver.
[quote name='Airhogg' post='1055157' date='May 13 2010, 05:51 PM']I'm curious how 3D Vision Surround will work with the HDTV's that are listed as compatible when each TV requires a 3 pin 3D sync connection, but 3D Vision only has (1) 3 pin sync connector. Hmmmm.... I'm glad I held off on buying 3 of those Mitsubishi 73" DLP's.
[quote name='Airhogg' post='1055157' date='May 13 2010, 12:51 PM']I'm curious how 3D Vision Surround will work with the HDTV's that are listed as compatible when each TV requires a 3 pin 3D sync connection, but 3D Vision only has (1) 3 pin sync connector. Hmmmm.... I'm glad I held off on buying 3 of those Mitsubishi 73" DLP's.[/quote]
I don't know how it will work...but if it does, one would be stupid not to buy the Mitsubishi DLPs as an 3D TV.
Price wise...3 60 inch 3D capable DLPs = 1 55 inch 3D capable LCD...so there you go :)
[quote name='Airhogg' post='1055157' date='May 13 2010, 12:51 PM']I'm curious how 3D Vision Surround will work with the HDTV's that are listed as compatible when each TV requires a 3 pin 3D sync connection, but 3D Vision only has (1) 3 pin sync connector. Hmmmm.... I'm glad I held off on buying 3 of those Mitsubishi 73" DLP's.
I don't know how it will work...but if it does, one would be stupid not to buy the Mitsubishi DLPs as an 3D TV.
Price wise...3 60 inch 3D capable DLPs = 1 55 inch 3D capable LCD...so there you go :)
As cool as that sounds, I would rather go the triple projector route, since you're already going to be using a dedicated room in the house, you might as well go all out with the wall sized displays! Plus, 3 projectors and 3 screens would be about the same price (around $3000 right?).
As cool as that sounds, I would rather go the triple projector route, since you're already going to be using a dedicated room in the house, you might as well go all out with the wall sized displays! Plus, 3 projectors and 3 screens would be about the same price (around $3000 right?).
[quote name='redman223' post='1056059' date='May 15 2010, 02:56 AM']As cool as that sounds, I would rather go the triple projector route, since you're already going to be using a dedicated room in the house, you might as well go all out with the wall sized displays! Plus, 3 projectors and 3 screens would be about the same price (around $3000 right?).[/quote]
Yes, and it may be the only way to get that size in triple 3D since projectors don't require the 3 pin 3D sync plug. There is only room for 1 display if using this plug... as far as I know.
[quote name='redman223' post='1056059' date='May 15 2010, 02:56 AM']As cool as that sounds, I would rather go the triple projector route, since you're already going to be using a dedicated room in the house, you might as well go all out with the wall sized displays! Plus, 3 projectors and 3 screens would be about the same price (around $3000 right?).
Yes, and it may be the only way to get that size in triple 3D since projectors don't require the 3 pin 3D sync plug. There is only room for 1 display if using this plug... as far as I know.
you only need one 3d sync port for all three tv's. all this device does is drive the glasses.
might as well get the projectors- they run at 720- the DLP tvs run at 1080p signal- times that by three and your computer will not be able to run it at very high visual quality. 720p will be much easier on the hardware its more than half the pixels.
Plus you have to consider that DLP tv's use checker board 1080p which is half resolution HD and basically the same pixels as 720p- but your computer is rendering a full 1080 picture. so you are rendering 1080p but only getting the pixels of 720p. so just go native 720p and gain the performance increase of 720p- which you will need to drive all these pixels.
you only need one 3d sync port for all three tv's. all this device does is drive the glasses.
might as well get the projectors- they run at 720- the DLP tvs run at 1080p signal- times that by three and your computer will not be able to run it at very high visual quality. 720p will be much easier on the hardware its more than half the pixels.
Plus you have to consider that DLP tv's use checker board 1080p which is half resolution HD and basically the same pixels as 720p- but your computer is rendering a full 1080 picture. so you are rendering 1080p but only getting the pixels of 720p. so just go native 720p and gain the performance increase of 720p- which you will need to drive all these pixels.
System:
Intel I7 920 overclocked to 4ghz
Asus Rampage Extreme II
2 Ge-force 480 in SLI
GTX 295 PhysX Card
12gb ddr3 2000mhz ram
Intel SSD in RAID 0
BR RW
1000w Sony surround sound
NVIDIA 3D Vision
3d displays tested:
Mitsubishi 65" DLP 3d HDTV (good old 1080p checkerboard since 2007!!!)
Panasonic VT25 (nice 2d but I returned it due to cross talk)
Acer H5360 720p on 130" screen (the best 3d)
23" Acer LCD monitor (horrible cross talk- sold it)
[quote name='redman223' post='1056059' date='May 15 2010, 01:56 AM']As cool as that sounds, I would rather go the triple projector route, since you're already going to be using a dedicated room in the house, you might as well go all out with the wall sized displays! Plus, 3 projectors and 3 screens would be about the same price (around $3000 right?).[/quote]
The only thing about that is you need a lot of wall space--this is exactly what I'm trying to do and in fact am trying to do it as rear projection. When I look at 3 monitors, 3 DLP TVs, or 3 projectors, it seems like the 3 DLP route is stuck in the middle without a good justification for it. If you are going to have 3 DLPs (and all those bezels too don't forget), you might just have one projector instead and do 3D on it.
[quote name='redman223' post='1056059' date='May 15 2010, 01:56 AM']As cool as that sounds, I would rather go the triple projector route, since you're already going to be using a dedicated room in the house, you might as well go all out with the wall sized displays! Plus, 3 projectors and 3 screens would be about the same price (around $3000 right?).
The only thing about that is you need a lot of wall space--this is exactly what I'm trying to do and in fact am trying to do it as rear projection. When I look at 3 monitors, 3 DLP TVs, or 3 projectors, it seems like the 3 DLP route is stuck in the middle without a good justification for it. If you are going to have 3 DLPs (and all those bezels too don't forget), you might just have one projector instead and do 3D on it.
[quote name='disolitude' post='1066204' date='Jun 2 2010, 12:16 PM']How would you achieve the surround view with projectors? I mean, having all 3 project on to a flat wall does not "surround" the user...[/quote]
It would if you had each screen on a different wall. Either that or have the middle one flat on the wall and the other 2 screens angled.
[quote name='disolitude' post='1066204' date='Jun 2 2010, 12:16 PM']How would you achieve the surround view with projectors? I mean, having all 3 project on to a flat wall does not "surround" the user...
It would if you had each screen on a different wall. Either that or have the middle one flat on the wall and the other 2 screens angled.
I7 2600k @5Ghz | Asus P8Z68-V Pro | SS Phase Change | Corsair AX1200 watt PSU | G-Skill 1600CL7 | Asus GTX680 x2 SLI | Lian-Li PC8N-WX | Intel 520 120GB SSD | HP ZR24w 24" S-IPS x3 Nvidia Surround | Samsung S27A950D 27" 120Hz LCD
[quote name='Muppet' post='1066356' date='Jun 2 2010, 06:31 AM']It would if you had each screen on a different wall. Either that or have the middle one flat on the wall and the other 2 screens angled.[/quote]
The main thing to bear in mind is to ensure that you buy TV's that are fullHD3D, that is, the TV renders each frame at 1080p. The (prototype's) for sale currently are a rip off.
Panasonic have teamed up with nvidia with their latest viera's which connect with your PC via the soon to be released (tongue in cheek) 3DTVPLAY software. FullHD3D for games and movies, and you get to wear the groovy Panasonic glasses.
[quote name='Muppet' post='1066356' date='Jun 2 2010, 06:31 AM']It would if you had each screen on a different wall. Either that or have the middle one flat on the wall and the other 2 screens angled.
The main thing to bear in mind is to ensure that you buy TV's that are fullHD3D, that is, the TV renders each frame at 1080p. The (prototype's) for sale currently are a rip off.
Panasonic have teamed up with nvidia with their latest viera's which connect with your PC via the soon to be released (tongue in cheek) 3DTVPLAY software. FullHD3D for games and movies, and you get to wear the groovy Panasonic glasses.
[quote name='slipstream' post='1066383' date='Jun 2 2010, 06:31 PM']The main thing to bear in mind is to ensure that you buy TV's that are fullHD3D, that is, the TV renders each frame at 1080p. The (prototype's) for sale currently are a rip off.
Panasonic have teamed up with nvidia with their latest viera's which connect with your PC via the soon to be released (tongue in cheek) 3DTVPLAY software. FullHD3D for games and movies, and you get to wear the groovy Panasonic glasses.
[url="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNdwVLJHq7M&playnext_from=TL&videos=Mv5D44KOV5s"]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNdwVLJHq7M...eos=Mv5D44KOV5s[/url][/quote]
I am really keen to check out one of the Panasonic 3D Plasmas myself. I have heard they are the best solution so far when it comes to 3D TV's. I am also interested in 3DTVPlay, to see how it goes. A Projector would be very nice, but i'm not interested until they are Full HD.
[quote name='slipstream' post='1066383' date='Jun 2 2010, 06:31 PM']The main thing to bear in mind is to ensure that you buy TV's that are fullHD3D, that is, the TV renders each frame at 1080p. The (prototype's) for sale currently are a rip off.
Panasonic have teamed up with nvidia with their latest viera's which connect with your PC via the soon to be released (tongue in cheek) 3DTVPLAY software. FullHD3D for games and movies, and you get to wear the groovy Panasonic glasses.
I am really keen to check out one of the Panasonic 3D Plasmas myself. I have heard they are the best solution so far when it comes to 3D TV's. I am also interested in 3DTVPlay, to see how it goes. A Projector would be very nice, but i'm not interested until they are Full HD.
I7 2600k @5Ghz | Asus P8Z68-V Pro | SS Phase Change | Corsair AX1200 watt PSU | G-Skill 1600CL7 | Asus GTX680 x2 SLI | Lian-Li PC8N-WX | Intel 520 120GB SSD | HP ZR24w 24" S-IPS x3 Nvidia Surround | Samsung S27A950D 27" 120Hz LCD
[quote name='slipstream' post='1066383' date='Jun 1 2010, 11:31 PM']The main thing to bear in mind is to ensure that you buy TV's that are fullHD3D, that is, the TV renders each frame at 1080p. The (prototype's) for sale currently are a rip off.
Panasonic have teamed up with nvidia with their latest viera's which connect with your PC via the soon to be released (tongue in cheek) 3DTVPLAY software. FullHD3D for games and movies, and you get to wear the groovy Panasonic glasses.
[quote name='slipstream' post='1066383' date='Jun 1 2010, 11:31 PM']The main thing to bear in mind is to ensure that you buy TV's that are fullHD3D, that is, the TV renders each frame at 1080p. The (prototype's) for sale currently are a rip off.
Panasonic have teamed up with nvidia with their latest viera's which connect with your PC via the soon to be released (tongue in cheek) 3DTVPLAY software. FullHD3D for games and movies, and you get to wear the groovy Panasonic glasses.
[quote name='Muppet' post='1066388' date='Jun 1 2010, 11:46 PM']I am really keen to check out one of the Panasonic 3D Plasmas myself. I have heard they are the best solution so far when it comes to 3D TV's. I am also interested in 3DTVPlay, to see how it goes. A Projector would be very nice, but i'm not interested until they are Full HD.[/quote]
ive seen them! very nice in blu ray 3d. Plasma has very good image quality. the only down side is for gamers- we only get 720p gaming- not full hd.
im skipping this generation of 3d tv until there is a 1080p 3d vision ready projector or tv for sale. i could care less about 3d blu ray- we wont have any disks to buy for quite a while- whereas now i can game in 3d on hundreds of pc games with 3d vision.
[quote name='Muppet' post='1066388' date='Jun 1 2010, 11:46 PM']I am really keen to check out one of the Panasonic 3D Plasmas myself. I have heard they are the best solution so far when it comes to 3D TV's. I am also interested in 3DTVPlay, to see how it goes. A Projector would be very nice, but i'm not interested until they are Full HD.
ive seen them! very nice in blu ray 3d. Plasma has very good image quality. the only down side is for gamers- we only get 720p gaming- not full hd.
im skipping this generation of 3d tv until there is a 1080p 3d vision ready projector or tv for sale. i could care less about 3d blu ray- we wont have any disks to buy for quite a while- whereas now i can game in 3d on hundreds of pc games with 3d vision.
System:
Intel I7 920 overclocked to 4ghz
Asus Rampage Extreme II
2 Ge-force 480 in SLI
GTX 295 PhysX Card
12gb ddr3 2000mhz ram
Intel SSD in RAID 0
BR RW
1000w Sony surround sound
NVIDIA 3D Vision
3d displays tested:
Mitsubishi 65" DLP 3d HDTV (good old 1080p checkerboard since 2007!!!)
Panasonic VT25 (nice 2d but I returned it due to cross talk)
Acer H5360 720p on 130" screen (the best 3d)
23" Acer LCD monitor (horrible cross talk- sold it)
[quote name='disolitude' post='1066204' date='Jun 1 2010, 07:16 PM']How would you achieve the surround view with projectors? I mean, having all 3 project on to a flat wall does not "surround" the user...[/quote]
Take a look at the Nvidia pictures of their demos of this. They don't angle the screens. It breaks the 3D effect. People need to get a clue about this before too much money is lost on expensive monitor projects. The same setup for multi-monitor/projector in 2D will not work in 3D.
[quote name='disolitude' post='1066204' date='Jun 1 2010, 07:16 PM']How would you achieve the surround view with projectors? I mean, having all 3 project on to a flat wall does not "surround" the user...
Take a look at the Nvidia pictures of their demos of this. They don't angle the screens. It breaks the 3D effect. People need to get a clue about this before too much money is lost on expensive monitor projects. The same setup for multi-monitor/projector in 2D will not work in 3D.
And no driver.
And no driver.
Win 7 64 - i7 4770k 4.5ghz - Corsair hydro water cooled - MSI Z87-GD65 mobo - MSI GTX 780ti Gaming twin frozr 3GB - 16GB Corsair Vengeance 2133 RAM - 500 GB SSD - Corsair 760 PSU
...good point.
...good point.
I don't know how it will work...but if it does, one would be stupid not to buy the Mitsubishi DLPs as an 3D TV.
Price wise...3 60 inch 3D capable DLPs = 1 55 inch 3D capable LCD...so there you go :)
I don't know how it will work...but if it does, one would be stupid not to buy the Mitsubishi DLPs as an 3D TV.
Price wise...3 60 inch 3D capable DLPs = 1 55 inch 3D capable LCD...so there you go :)
Yes, and it may be the only way to get that size in triple 3D since projectors don't require the 3 pin 3D sync plug. There is only room for 1 display if using this plug... as far as I know.
Yes, and it may be the only way to get that size in triple 3D since projectors don't require the 3 pin 3D sync plug. There is only room for 1 display if using this plug... as far as I know.
might as well get the projectors- they run at 720- the DLP tvs run at 1080p signal- times that by three and your computer will not be able to run it at very high visual quality. 720p will be much easier on the hardware its more than half the pixels.
Plus you have to consider that DLP tv's use checker board 1080p which is half resolution HD and basically the same pixels as 720p- but your computer is rendering a full 1080 picture. so you are rendering 1080p but only getting the pixels of 720p. so just go native 720p and gain the performance increase of 720p- which you will need to drive all these pixels.
might as well get the projectors- they run at 720- the DLP tvs run at 1080p signal- times that by three and your computer will not be able to run it at very high visual quality. 720p will be much easier on the hardware its more than half the pixels.
Plus you have to consider that DLP tv's use checker board 1080p which is half resolution HD and basically the same pixels as 720p- but your computer is rendering a full 1080 picture. so you are rendering 1080p but only getting the pixels of 720p. so just go native 720p and gain the performance increase of 720p- which you will need to drive all these pixels.
System:
Intel I7 920 overclocked to 4ghz
Asus Rampage Extreme II
2 Ge-force 480 in SLI
GTX 295 PhysX Card
12gb ddr3 2000mhz ram
Intel SSD in RAID 0
BR RW
1000w Sony surround sound
NVIDIA 3D Vision
3d displays tested:
Mitsubishi 65" DLP 3d HDTV (good old 1080p checkerboard since 2007!!!)
Panasonic VT25 (nice 2d but I returned it due to cross talk)
Acer H5360 720p on 130" screen (the best 3d)
23" Acer LCD monitor (horrible cross talk- sold it)
Samsung 65D8000
The only thing about that is you need a lot of wall space--this is exactly what I'm trying to do and in fact am trying to do it as rear projection. When I look at 3 monitors, 3 DLP TVs, or 3 projectors, it seems like the 3 DLP route is stuck in the middle without a good justification for it. If you are going to have 3 DLPs (and all those bezels too don't forget), you might just have one projector instead and do 3D on it.
The only thing about that is you need a lot of wall space--this is exactly what I'm trying to do and in fact am trying to do it as rear projection. When I look at 3 monitors, 3 DLP TVs, or 3 projectors, it seems like the 3 DLP route is stuck in the middle without a good justification for it. If you are going to have 3 DLPs (and all those bezels too don't forget), you might just have one projector instead and do 3D on it.
It would if you had each screen on a different wall. Either that or have the middle one flat on the wall and the other 2 screens angled.
It would if you had each screen on a different wall. Either that or have the middle one flat on the wall and the other 2 screens angled.
I7 2600k @5Ghz | Asus P8Z68-V Pro | SS Phase Change | Corsair AX1200 watt PSU | G-Skill 1600CL7 | Asus GTX680 x2 SLI | Lian-Li PC8N-WX | Intel 520 120GB SSD | HP ZR24w 24" S-IPS x3 Nvidia Surround | Samsung S27A950D 27" 120Hz LCD
The main thing to bear in mind is to ensure that you buy TV's that are fullHD3D, that is, the TV renders each frame at 1080p. The (prototype's) for sale currently are a rip off.
Panasonic have teamed up with nvidia with their latest viera's which connect with your PC via the soon to be released (tongue in cheek) 3DTVPLAY software. FullHD3D for games and movies, and you get to wear the groovy Panasonic glasses.
[url="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNdwVLJHq7M&playnext_from=TL&videos=Mv5D44KOV5s"]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNdwVLJHq7M...eos=Mv5D44KOV5s[/url]
The main thing to bear in mind is to ensure that you buy TV's that are fullHD3D, that is, the TV renders each frame at 1080p. The (prototype's) for sale currently are a rip off.
Panasonic have teamed up with nvidia with their latest viera's which connect with your PC via the soon to be released (tongue in cheek) 3DTVPLAY software. FullHD3D for games and movies, and you get to wear the groovy Panasonic glasses.
;playnext_from=TL&videos=Mv5D44KOV5s" rel="nofollow" target = "_blank">...eos=Mv5D44KOV5s
Win 7 64 - i7 4770k 4.5ghz - Corsair hydro water cooled - MSI Z87-GD65 mobo - MSI GTX 780ti Gaming twin frozr 3GB - 16GB Corsair Vengeance 2133 RAM - 500 GB SSD - Corsair 760 PSU
Panasonic have teamed up with nvidia with their latest viera's which connect with your PC via the soon to be released (tongue in cheek) 3DTVPLAY software. FullHD3D for games and movies, and you get to wear the groovy Panasonic glasses.
[url="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNdwVLJHq7M&playnext_from=TL&videos=Mv5D44KOV5s"]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNdwVLJHq7M...eos=Mv5D44KOV5s[/url][/quote]
I am really keen to check out one of the Panasonic 3D Plasmas myself. I have heard they are the best solution so far when it comes to 3D TV's. I am also interested in 3DTVPlay, to see how it goes. A Projector would be very nice, but i'm not interested until they are Full HD.
Panasonic have teamed up with nvidia with their latest viera's which connect with your PC via the soon to be released (tongue in cheek) 3DTVPLAY software. FullHD3D for games and movies, and you get to wear the groovy Panasonic glasses.
;playnext_from=TL&videos=Mv5D44KOV5s" rel="nofollow" target = "_blank">...eos=Mv5D44KOV5s
I am really keen to check out one of the Panasonic 3D Plasmas myself. I have heard they are the best solution so far when it comes to 3D TV's. I am also interested in 3DTVPlay, to see how it goes. A Projector would be very nice, but i'm not interested until they are Full HD.
I7 2600k @5Ghz | Asus P8Z68-V Pro | SS Phase Change | Corsair AX1200 watt PSU | G-Skill 1600CL7 | Asus GTX680 x2 SLI | Lian-Li PC8N-WX | Intel 520 120GB SSD | HP ZR24w 24" S-IPS x3 Nvidia Surround | Samsung S27A950D 27" 120Hz LCD
Panasonic have teamed up with nvidia with their latest viera's which connect with your PC via the soon to be released (tongue in cheek) 3DTVPLAY software. FullHD3D for games and movies, and you get to wear the groovy Panasonic glasses.
[url="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNdwVLJHq7M&playnext_from=TL&videos=Mv5D44KOV5s"]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNdwVLJHq7M...eos=Mv5D44KOV5s[/url][/quote]
none of the 3d tvs can game at 1080p. we only get HD blu ray..... gaming is only 720p
Panasonic have teamed up with nvidia with their latest viera's which connect with your PC via the soon to be released (tongue in cheek) 3DTVPLAY software. FullHD3D for games and movies, and you get to wear the groovy Panasonic glasses.
;playnext_from=TL&videos=Mv5D44KOV5s" rel="nofollow" target = "_blank">...eos=Mv5D44KOV5s
none of the 3d tvs can game at 1080p. we only get HD blu ray..... gaming is only 720p
System:
Intel I7 920 overclocked to 4ghz
Asus Rampage Extreme II
2 Ge-force 480 in SLI
GTX 295 PhysX Card
12gb ddr3 2000mhz ram
Intel SSD in RAID 0
BR RW
1000w Sony surround sound
NVIDIA 3D Vision
3d displays tested:
Mitsubishi 65" DLP 3d HDTV (good old 1080p checkerboard since 2007!!!)
Panasonic VT25 (nice 2d but I returned it due to cross talk)
Acer H5360 720p on 130" screen (the best 3d)
23" Acer LCD monitor (horrible cross talk- sold it)
Samsung 65D8000
ive seen them! very nice in blu ray 3d. Plasma has very good image quality. the only down side is for gamers- we only get 720p gaming- not full hd.
im skipping this generation of 3d tv until there is a 1080p 3d vision ready projector or tv for sale. i could care less about 3d blu ray- we wont have any disks to buy for quite a while- whereas now i can game in 3d on hundreds of pc games with 3d vision.
ive seen them! very nice in blu ray 3d. Plasma has very good image quality. the only down side is for gamers- we only get 720p gaming- not full hd.
im skipping this generation of 3d tv until there is a 1080p 3d vision ready projector or tv for sale. i could care less about 3d blu ray- we wont have any disks to buy for quite a while- whereas now i can game in 3d on hundreds of pc games with 3d vision.
System:
Intel I7 920 overclocked to 4ghz
Asus Rampage Extreme II
2 Ge-force 480 in SLI
GTX 295 PhysX Card
12gb ddr3 2000mhz ram
Intel SSD in RAID 0
BR RW
1000w Sony surround sound
NVIDIA 3D Vision
3d displays tested:
Mitsubishi 65" DLP 3d HDTV (good old 1080p checkerboard since 2007!!!)
Panasonic VT25 (nice 2d but I returned it due to cross talk)
Acer H5360 720p on 130" screen (the best 3d)
23" Acer LCD monitor (horrible cross talk- sold it)
Samsung 65D8000
Take a look at the Nvidia pictures of their demos of this. They don't angle the screens. It breaks the 3D effect. People need to get a clue about this before too much money is lost on expensive monitor projects. The same setup for multi-monitor/projector in 2D will not work in 3D.
Take a look at the Nvidia pictures of their demos of this. They don't angle the screens. It breaks the 3D effect. People need to get a clue about this before too much money is lost on expensive monitor projects. The same setup for multi-monitor/projector in 2D will not work in 3D.