hello,
I have tested my brand new 3D vision glasses in games, it works great
I bought 1 movie on Bluray 3D : Christmas Carol
I tried PowerDVD and TotalMedia Theatre , both with 3D enabled, all I see is snow on the screen when switching to fullscreen
I have not been able to watch the movie (I only hear the sound)
I cannot play 2D movies in fullscreen in powerDVD when 2D to 3D is enabled
my card is Geforce 460 , My monitor is Samsung syncmaster 2233RZ , OS is win7
I have watched videos from nvidia website with 3D on
You don't need a 1080P monitor to watch Blu-Ray. Any of the programs can scale (bigger or smaller) to what resolution you have. Also, I am not sure that is an HDCP issue (but it might be). This is because if you try to play a Blu-Ray on a non-HDCP monitor there will be a popup box clearly stating your monitor is not supported. It doesn't show snow or static (at least not on my monitor). You can, however, check if your monitor is HDCP-compliant by going into the Nvidia Control Panel. If it is an HDCP issue, you can get around it with AnyDVD HD. Also, I would check to make sure you have the latest Nvidia driver so you are sure you have the Blu-Ray hardware decoding. Sounds more like a codec issue than anything else.
You don't need a 1080P monitor to watch Blu-Ray. Any of the programs can scale (bigger or smaller) to what resolution you have. Also, I am not sure that is an HDCP issue (but it might be). This is because if you try to play a Blu-Ray on a non-HDCP monitor there will be a popup box clearly stating your monitor is not supported. It doesn't show snow or static (at least not on my monitor). You can, however, check if your monitor is HDCP-compliant by going into the Nvidia Control Panel. If it is an HDCP issue, you can get around it with AnyDVD HD. Also, I would check to make sure you have the latest Nvidia driver so you are sure you have the Blu-Ray hardware decoding. Sounds more like a codec issue than anything else.
Bluray has some files with an extension of m2ts in a certain kind of folder structure as I know.. I have the same monitor with a GTX295 and I play 3d bluray mounted iso image with the latest Powerdvd 10...
Bluray has some files with an extension of m2ts in a certain kind of folder structure as I know.. I have the same monitor with a GTX295 and I play 3d bluray mounted iso image with the latest Powerdvd 10...
thanks for your answer !
it works !
I can watch 3D movies only if AnyDVD HD is active (????????)
by the way my monitor is HDCP compliant (saw that in the control panel)
I was afraid it would never work with this monitor (I bought it for 3D games and movies)
[quote name='cybereality' date='28 December 2010 - 06:37 PM' timestamp='1293557851' post='1167405']
You don't need a 1080P monitor to watch Blu-Ray. Any of the programs can scale (bigger or smaller) to what resolution you have. Also, I am not sure that is an HDCP issue (but it might be). This is because if you try to play a Blu-Ray on a non-HDCP monitor there will be a popup box clearly stating your monitor is not supported. It doesn't show snow or static (at least not on my monitor). You can, however, check if your monitor is HDCP-compliant by going into the Nvidia Control Panel. If it is an HDCP issue, you can get around it with AnyDVD HD. Also, I would check to make sure you have the latest Nvidia driver so you are sure you have the Blu-Ray hardware decoding. Sounds more like a codec issue than anything else.
[/quote]
I can watch 3D movies only if AnyDVD HD is active (????????)
by the way my monitor is HDCP compliant (saw that in the control panel)
I was afraid it would never work with this monitor (I bought it for 3D games and movies)
[quote name='cybereality' date='28 December 2010 - 06:37 PM' timestamp='1293557851' post='1167405']
You don't need a 1080P monitor to watch Blu-Ray. Any of the programs can scale (bigger or smaller) to what resolution you have. Also, I am not sure that is an HDCP issue (but it might be). This is because if you try to play a Blu-Ray on a non-HDCP monitor there will be a popup box clearly stating your monitor is not supported. It doesn't show snow or static (at least not on my monitor). You can, however, check if your monitor is HDCP-compliant by going into the Nvidia Control Panel. If it is an HDCP issue, you can get around it with AnyDVD HD. Also, I would check to make sure you have the latest Nvidia driver so you are sure you have the Blu-Ray hardware decoding. Sounds more like a codec issue than anything else.
I have tested my brand new 3D vision glasses in games, it works great
I bought 1 movie on Bluray 3D : Christmas Carol
I tried PowerDVD and TotalMedia Theatre , both with 3D enabled, all I see is snow on the screen when switching to fullscreen
I have not been able to watch the movie (I only hear the sound)
I cannot play 2D movies in fullscreen in powerDVD when 2D to 3D is enabled
my card is Geforce 460 , My monitor is Samsung syncmaster 2233RZ , OS is win7
I have watched videos from nvidia website with 3D on
any idea ?
I have tested my brand new 3D vision glasses in games, it works great
I bought 1 movie on Bluray 3D : Christmas Carol
I tried PowerDVD and TotalMedia Theatre , both with 3D enabled, all I see is snow on the screen when switching to fullscreen
I have not been able to watch the movie (I only hear the sound)
I cannot play 2D movies in fullscreen in powerDVD when 2D to 3D is enabled
my card is Geforce 460 , My monitor is Samsung syncmaster 2233RZ , OS is win7
I have watched videos from nvidia website with 3D on
any idea ?
check my blog - cybereality.com
it works !
I can watch 3D movies only if AnyDVD HD is active (????????)
by the way my monitor is HDCP compliant (saw that in the control panel)
I was afraid it would never work with this monitor (I bought it for 3D games and movies)
[quote name='cybereality' date='28 December 2010 - 06:37 PM' timestamp='1293557851' post='1167405']
You don't need a 1080P monitor to watch Blu-Ray. Any of the programs can scale (bigger or smaller) to what resolution you have. Also, I am not sure that is an HDCP issue (but it might be). This is because if you try to play a Blu-Ray on a non-HDCP monitor there will be a popup box clearly stating your monitor is not supported. It doesn't show snow or static (at least not on my monitor). You can, however, check if your monitor is HDCP-compliant by going into the Nvidia Control Panel. If it is an HDCP issue, you can get around it with AnyDVD HD. Also, I would check to make sure you have the latest Nvidia driver so you are sure you have the Blu-Ray hardware decoding. Sounds more like a codec issue than anything else.
[/quote]
it works !
I can watch 3D movies only if AnyDVD HD is active (????????)
by the way my monitor is HDCP compliant (saw that in the control panel)
I was afraid it would never work with this monitor (I bought it for 3D games and movies)
[quote name='cybereality' date='28 December 2010 - 06:37 PM' timestamp='1293557851' post='1167405']
You don't need a 1080P monitor to watch Blu-Ray. Any of the programs can scale (bigger or smaller) to what resolution you have. Also, I am not sure that is an HDCP issue (but it might be). This is because if you try to play a Blu-Ray on a non-HDCP monitor there will be a popup box clearly stating your monitor is not supported. It doesn't show snow or static (at least not on my monitor). You can, however, check if your monitor is HDCP-compliant by going into the Nvidia Control Panel. If it is an HDCP issue, you can get around it with AnyDVD HD. Also, I would check to make sure you have the latest Nvidia driver so you are sure you have the Blu-Ray hardware decoding. Sounds more like a codec issue than anything else.
What you need is to have powerdvd 10 with the last update installed.
Active 3D in the option, to see a movie in 3d with powerdvd 10 you need to see it in fullscreen !
What you need is to have powerdvd 10 with the last update installed.
Active 3D in the option, to see a movie in 3d with powerdvd 10 you need to see it in fullscreen !