Hello community
I´m newbie in this, and i need some expert help, i try Nvidia 3D Tv Vision, and i discover there it exist´s formats MKV version 2 i think, and SBS, H-SBS format´s for 3D Movies.
the thing is, that in one game i get real 3D, with things passing in front of my face, etc...but in the movies, i try one SBS, Mkv Movie, and the only thing i get is deepness, nothing pop´s out the Tv
then i read some forums, but the only thing i did try, was putting that SBS file in a HDD, and give it a try coneting it to my Tv, and running it from there, But the Tv does n´t detect that Mkv file has a 3D element, the only thing i was capable of was to manually turn on the 3D, and see some deepness......
in my Notebook, i try has well, the stereoscopic player, but i don´t know if it is because of the configurations, the only hting i get, is, if i put "interwoven lines" option i get 2 different image's overlapping with distance from one to another, if i choose "Side by side" i get deepness only, all this made with 3D Vision ON
i try NVIDIA 3D vision player, with that file to, and i only get deepness as well. i don´t know if it is because of the configurations
i´m downloading a H-SBS to try and see if it´s different, if something pop´s up from the screen to the middle of my room
and that´s what i want to know, how to do this? how can i put 3D in real action, like the game for example. my tv is a panasonic tx l42ft60 and my notebook an asus G750JX
i think i have no limitations here
i appreciate a patient mind on this
Thank you very much in advance
I´m newbie in this, and i need some expert help, i try Nvidia 3D Tv Vision, and i discover there it exist´s formats MKV version 2 i think, and SBS, H-SBS format´s for 3D Movies.
the thing is, that in one game i get real 3D, with things passing in front of my face, etc...but in the movies, i try one SBS, Mkv Movie, and the only thing i get is deepness, nothing pop´s out the Tv
then i read some forums, but the only thing i did try, was putting that SBS file in a HDD, and give it a try coneting it to my Tv, and running it from there, But the Tv does n´t detect that Mkv file has a 3D element, the only thing i was capable of was to manually turn on the 3D, and see some deepness......
in my Notebook, i try has well, the stereoscopic player, but i don´t know if it is because of the configurations, the only hting i get, is, if i put "interwoven lines" option i get 2 different image's overlapping with distance from one to another, if i choose "Side by side" i get deepness only, all this made with 3D Vision ON
i try NVIDIA 3D vision player, with that file to, and i only get deepness as well. i don´t know if it is because of the configurations
i´m downloading a H-SBS to try and see if it´s different, if something pop´s up from the screen to the middle of my room
and that´s what i want to know, how to do this? how can i put 3D in real action, like the game for example. my tv is a panasonic tx l42ft60 and my notebook an asus G750JX
i think i have no limitations here
Take your 3D glasses off and then look at the separation, there isn't much there. Movies are made for the big screen ... but even there they're conservative about it, so on smaller screens they don't look nearly as good, nearly as 3D. You probably are getting 'pop out' just not nearly what you're used to with 3D Vision. If you recorded a game you were playing in 3D Vision on your laptop and then tried to view it in a theater you wouldn't be able to because the separation would be far too great.
Take your 3D glasses off and then look at the separation, there isn't much there. Movies are made for the big screen ... but even there they're conservative about it, so on smaller screens they don't look nearly as good, nearly as 3D. You probably are getting 'pop out' just not nearly what you're used to with 3D Vision. If you recorded a game you were playing in 3D Vision on your laptop and then tried to view it in a theater you wouldn't be able to because the separation would be far too great.
Because of the size of the screen and the depth of the theater itself movie makers limit the amount of 'pop out' so that folks in the front rows of the theater don't get eye stress+headaches while watching.
It is much easier and safer to create more depth than to have 'pop out' effects as those sitting closer to the screen will just see less depth than those sitting further away.
I trick that I use to check the depth of a 3D image or video is what I call the 'Egyptian head trick'.
Simply put, with a still or frozen image on the screen move your head side-2-side while looking at the image. The more depth the 3D image has the more the background will "move" as compared to the foreground of the image. The background should move faster and a greater distance then the foreground. It will seemingly 'rotate' at the point of convergence if the L-R images.
(moving up/down can also cause movement)
The amount of 3D effect we can coax out of 3DVision is much more than what is used in the movies. They limit the effect so that viewers don't experience discomfort.
Because of the size of the screen and the depth of the theater itself movie makers limit the amount of 'pop out' so that folks in the front rows of the theater don't get eye stress+headaches while watching.
It is much easier and safer to create more depth than to have 'pop out' effects as those sitting closer to the screen will just see less depth than those sitting further away.
I trick that I use to check the depth of a 3D image or video is what I call the 'Egyptian head trick'.
Simply put, with a still or frozen image on the screen move your head side-2-side while looking at the image. The more depth the 3D image has the more the background will "move" as compared to the foreground of the image. The background should move faster and a greater distance then the foreground. It will seemingly 'rotate' at the point of convergence if the L-R images.
(moving up/down can also cause movement)
The amount of 3D effect we can coax out of 3DVision is much more than what is used in the movies. They limit the effect so that viewers don't experience discomfort.
but why in games the 3D pop´s out of the screen, and in movies even with the wright player´s, i get nothing, not even manually, only deepness, and things don´t come until they splash on the limit of the screen for example, the spash like it was behind in the deepness proximity level, i don´t know if i have myself clear here
is there other players, other options to configure, a tutorial of a player, definicions, anything, that i can put a movie in?
thank you very much in advance
sorry i´m a newbie at this
but why in games the 3D pop´s out of the screen, and in movies even with the wright player´s, i get nothing, not even manually, only deepness, and things don´t come until they splash on the limit of the screen for example, the spash like it was behind in the deepness proximity level, i don´t know if i have myself clear here
is there other players, other options to configure, a tutorial of a player, definicions, anything, that i can put a movie in?
Very few movies have a pop out effect. (I own over 40 3D blue rays and can count on one hand the ones with popout) If your not seeing pop out is because it just is not there.
Likely the best example is Disneys "A Christmas Story" with Jim Carry. For ~15sec at the start of the movie a snow effect will fill the space between you and your screen.
Sadly most consumers/movie goers blindly put on the 3D glasses and assume what they are watching is 3D. However most releases only have a handful (or less) of 3D scenes in them and many are 'conversions' where they attempt to fake the 3D effect (by adding depth) in post production. For example "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides" which was claimed to be shot in 3D has a handful scenes that OUGHT to have pop out (that does not) and when viewed in the Theater and at home show evidence of 'fake 3D methods', very few scenes look 3D or have any realistic depth.
Oddly "Yogi Bear" is one of the best examples of 3D that Holywood has. While there are only a few scenes with brief 'pop out' effects, if you lift your 3D glasses at any time during the movie you'll see two distinct L/R images ghosting on your screen, something that many releases rarely have as the effect is turned down so low or is non existent. (there are plenty of good quality 2D film making techniques that can show an illusion of depth without the image being really 3D)
Some of the pre Avitar 3D releases were pushing and showing off the 3D effect so titles like "Jaws 3D" and other earlier horror and 3D gimick titles may have much more pop out then anything post Avitar. Again sadly "for the sake of the art" movies that had popout were labeled 'cheap gimicks' and got bad press and reviews so in efforts to be 'legitimate' and reduce headaches/eye strain that some viewers complained about you won't find any "in your face" popout that 1970/80/90's 3D releases were known for.
(I'm still waiting for most of them to be re-released on 3D-Blueray for my collection)
Very few movies have a pop out effect. (I own over 40 3D blue rays and can count on one hand the ones with popout) If your not seeing pop out is because it just is not there.
Likely the best example is Disneys "A Christmas Story" with Jim Carry. For ~15sec at the start of the movie a snow effect will fill the space between you and your screen.
Sadly most consumers/movie goers blindly put on the 3D glasses and assume what they are watching is 3D. However most releases only have a handful (or less) of 3D scenes in them and many are 'conversions' where they attempt to fake the 3D effect (by adding depth) in post production. For example "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides" which was claimed to be shot in 3D has a handful scenes that OUGHT to have pop out (that does not) and when viewed in the Theater and at home show evidence of 'fake 3D methods', very few scenes look 3D or have any realistic depth.
Oddly "Yogi Bear" is one of the best examples of 3D that Holywood has. While there are only a few scenes with brief 'pop out' effects, if you lift your 3D glasses at any time during the movie you'll see two distinct L/R images ghosting on your screen, something that many releases rarely have as the effect is turned down so low or is non existent. (there are plenty of good quality 2D film making techniques that can show an illusion of depth without the image being really 3D)
Some of the pre Avitar 3D releases were pushing and showing off the 3D effect so titles like "Jaws 3D" and other earlier horror and 3D gimick titles may have much more pop out then anything post Avitar. Again sadly "for the sake of the art" movies that had popout were labeled 'cheap gimicks' and got bad press and reviews so in efforts to be 'legitimate' and reduce headaches/eye strain that some viewers complained about you won't find any "in your face" popout that 1970/80/90's 3D releases were known for.
(I'm still waiting for most of them to be re-released on 3D-Blueray for my collection)
What mbloof said- there are very few movies that have any pop-out effect.
You aren't doing anything wrong, and there aren't any adjustments that you can make to [i]movies[/i]. For games, things are wide open. But for movies, they filmed it with a specific idea in mind, and you only get to see what they want you to see.
For some that tend to use pop-out more, look for some IMAX movies in 3D. There is an undersea one in particular that I remember seeing the fish swim outside of the screen.
What mbloof said- there are very few movies that have any pop-out effect.
You aren't doing anything wrong, and there aren't any adjustments that you can make to movies. For games, things are wide open. But for movies, they filmed it with a specific idea in mind, and you only get to see what they want you to see.
For some that tend to use pop-out more, look for some IMAX movies in 3D. There is an undersea one in particular that I remember seeing the fish swim outside of the screen.
Acer H5360 (1280x720@120Hz) - ASUS VG248QE with GSync mod - 3D Vision 1&2 - Driver 372.54
GTX 970 - i5-4670K@4.2GHz - 12GB RAM - Win7x64+evilKB2670838 - 4 Disk X25 RAID
SAGER NP9870-S - GTX 980 - i7-6700K - Win10 Pro 1607 Latest 3Dmigoto Release Bo3b's School for ShaderHackers
friends thank you for your answers but you are not understanding what i´m trying to explain, but i finally got it.
picture this, when you see a 3D movie in theatres, the sense of distance between 2 people is perfect, you can see the shoulder of the person almost touching you, with all clearness of the effect,and the other person far away, but you see the body, in 3D.
the manual conversion 2D ---» 3D, doesn´t give you that sense, only some deepness, i don´t know if i´m explaining this clearly.
i see the movies like a 2D to 3D conversion, so no details, like in home theatres.
i tried now the 3D vision player, and selected "side by side left first" on the layout, and choose resolution, on control panel of NVIDIA to 1080 3D HD, and now i see all the shape of things, in Real 3D, not the converted manually one.
now i just want to know where is a player that handles DTS sound, because here goes out in stereo, and if there is a player were i can insert subtitles
Thank You All for your answers in advance.
friends thank you for your answers but you are not understanding what i´m trying to explain, but i finally got it.
picture this, when you see a 3D movie in theatres, the sense of distance between 2 people is perfect, you can see the shoulder of the person almost touching you, with all clearness of the effect,and the other person far away, but you see the body, in 3D.
the manual conversion 2D ---» 3D, doesn´t give you that sense, only some deepness, i don´t know if i´m explaining this clearly.
i see the movies like a 2D to 3D conversion, so no details, like in home theatres.
i tried now the 3D vision player, and selected "side by side left first" on the layout, and choose resolution, on control panel of NVIDIA to 1080 3D HD, and now i see all the shape of things, in Real 3D, not the converted manually one.
now i just want to know where is a player that handles DTS sound, because here goes out in stereo, and if there is a player were i can insert subtitles
3D conversions are like a film being displayed on transparent jello and somebody trying their best to push in the depth manually with their fingers. Not... good... I don't watch 2D conversions anymore and have not even bothered watching a SINGLE 3D movie on my 46" 3DTV yet.
But. Im a little excited to start watching some 3D now that i've learned how to use a particular setting. Its the setting on a 3DTV that modifies the amount of separation between the images. It has its limitations, but it is a way to make 3D in movies more realistic looking especially on smaller'ish screen and/or when sitting closer to the display. Its called different things on by different manufacturers, "3D perspective" or on mine, "3D effect", but you can tell if its working by observing the screen with the glasses off. I think PowerDVD software has that feature too.
3D conversions are like a film being displayed on transparent jello and somebody trying their best to push in the depth manually with their fingers. Not... good... I don't watch 2D conversions anymore and have not even bothered watching a SINGLE 3D movie on my 46" 3DTV yet.
But. Im a little excited to start watching some 3D now that i've learned how to use a particular setting. Its the setting on a 3DTV that modifies the amount of separation between the images. It has its limitations, but it is a way to make 3D in movies more realistic looking especially on smaller'ish screen and/or when sitting closer to the display. Its called different things on by different manufacturers, "3D perspective" or on mine, "3D effect", but you can tell if its working by observing the screen with the glasses off. I think PowerDVD software has that feature too.
[quote="Libertine"]3D conversions are like a film being displayed on transparent jello and somebody trying their best to push in the depth manually with their fingers. Not... good... I don't watch 2D conversions anymore and have not even bothered watching a SINGLE 3D movie on my 46" 3DTV yet.
But. Im a little excited to start watching some 3D now that i've learned how to use a particular setting. Its the setting on a 3DTV that modifies the amount of separation between the images. It has its limitations, but it is a way to make 3D in movies more realistic looking especially on smaller'ish screen and/or when sitting closer to the display. Its called different things on by different manufacturers, "3D perspective" or on mine, "3D effect", but you can tell if its working by observing the screen with the glasses off. I think PowerDVD software has that feature too.[/quote]
yes i have the option "level of deepness", but that only changes the deep of the image, not the shape of people, and from other objects, the sensation of the thing in your living room it´s not to much, but in real 3D, has i said before, it´s completely different practically you don´t have to do nothing manually on your tv, the change is in NVIDIA control panel, has i said before, and then in the player that you are using, and automaticly stays in real 3D like in a theatre.
the limitations of the player are bad, that´s why i´m asking for a player more powerful
Libertine said:3D conversions are like a film being displayed on transparent jello and somebody trying their best to push in the depth manually with their fingers. Not... good... I don't watch 2D conversions anymore and have not even bothered watching a SINGLE 3D movie on my 46" 3DTV yet.
But. Im a little excited to start watching some 3D now that i've learned how to use a particular setting. Its the setting on a 3DTV that modifies the amount of separation between the images. It has its limitations, but it is a way to make 3D in movies more realistic looking especially on smaller'ish screen and/or when sitting closer to the display. Its called different things on by different manufacturers, "3D perspective" or on mine, "3D effect", but you can tell if its working by observing the screen with the glasses off. I think PowerDVD software has that feature too.
yes i have the option "level of deepness", but that only changes the deep of the image, not the shape of people, and from other objects, the sensation of the thing in your living room it´s not to much, but in real 3D, has i said before, it´s completely different practically you don´t have to do nothing manually on your tv, the change is in NVIDIA control panel, has i said before, and then in the player that you are using, and automaticly stays in real 3D like in a theatre.
the limitations of the player are bad, that´s why i´m asking for a player more powerful
For all the comments about conversions from 2D Pacific rim is up there as one of the best looking 3D films but was shot in 2D, lovely depth and also the right amount of popout for the rain etc, for actual pop out you normally find documentaries are the best, there is one about Ocean dinosaurs that has a really good moment as one rises out of the ocean to catch its prey.
For all the comments about conversions from 2D Pacific rim is up there as one of the best looking 3D films but was shot in 2D, lovely depth and also the right amount of popout for the rain etc, for actual pop out you normally find documentaries are the best, there is one about Ocean dinosaurs that has a really good moment as one rises out of the ocean to catch its prey.
[quote="Al_Jourgensen"]
now i just want to know where is a player that handles DTS sound, because here goes out in stereo, and if there is a player were i can insert subtitles
Thank You All for your answers in advance. [/quote]
Just about all players I've used play DTS audio, make sure you have the required codecs installed, the Nvidia 3D player does with SBS movies, also if you want the best 3D movies/appearance you really want home projection, best setup there is by far!
Al_Jourgensen said:
now i just want to know where is a player that handles DTS sound, because here goes out in stereo, and if there is a player were i can insert subtitles
Thank You All for your answers in advance.
Just about all players I've used play DTS audio, make sure you have the required codecs installed, the Nvidia 3D player does with SBS movies, also if you want the best 3D movies/appearance you really want home projection, best setup there is by far!
[quote="ZedEx48K"][quote="Al_Jourgensen"]
now i just want to know where is a player that handles DTS sound, because here goes out in stereo, and if there is a player were i can insert subtitles
Thank You All for your answers in advance. [/quote]
Just about all players I've used play DTS audio, make sure you have the required codecs installed, the Nvidia 3D player does with SBS movies, also if you want the best 3D movies/appearance you really want home projection, best setup there is by far![/quote]
thanks for your answer but i can´t configure the audio in 3D vision player, do you know some tutorial for do that, or what options i can choose?
Thank you very much
Al_Jourgensen said:
now i just want to know where is a player that handles DTS sound, because here goes out in stereo, and if there is a player were i can insert subtitles
Thank You All for your answers in advance.
Just about all players I've used play DTS audio, make sure you have the required codecs installed, the Nvidia 3D player does with SBS movies, also if you want the best 3D movies/appearance you really want home projection, best setup there is by far!
thanks for your answer but i can´t configure the audio in 3D vision player, do you know some tutorial for do that, or what options i can choose?
[quote="Al_Jourgensen"]
thanks for your answer but i can´t configure the audio in 3D vision player, do you know some tutorial for do that, or what options i can choose?
Thank you very much[/quote]
Because the audio should already be 'configured' by the MKV file (being a container it will hold the video and audio track in their respective formats), get yourself a decent codec pack like Shark007's installed & set up your audio in it as needed, 5.1 analogue or sp-dif pass through if using optical or hdmi output.
Al_Jourgensen said:
thanks for your answer but i can´t configure the audio in 3D vision player, do you know some tutorial for do that, or what options i can choose?
Thank you very much
Because the audio should already be 'configured' by the MKV file (being a container it will hold the video and audio track in their respective formats), get yourself a decent codec pack like Shark007's installed & set up your audio in it as needed, 5.1 analogue or sp-dif pass through if using optical or hdmi output.
ok i find finaly the answer, powerdvd 13, imagine i got superman in the middle of my room. with subs and DTS sound in one click
thank you all for your kindness responses
I´m newbie in this, and i need some expert help, i try Nvidia 3D Tv Vision, and i discover there it exist´s formats MKV version 2 i think, and SBS, H-SBS format´s for 3D Movies.
the thing is, that in one game i get real 3D, with things passing in front of my face, etc...but in the movies, i try one SBS, Mkv Movie, and the only thing i get is deepness, nothing pop´s out the Tv
then i read some forums, but the only thing i did try, was putting that SBS file in a HDD, and give it a try coneting it to my Tv, and running it from there, But the Tv does n´t detect that Mkv file has a 3D element, the only thing i was capable of was to manually turn on the 3D, and see some deepness......
in my Notebook, i try has well, the stereoscopic player, but i don´t know if it is because of the configurations, the only hting i get, is, if i put "interwoven lines" option i get 2 different image's overlapping with distance from one to another, if i choose "Side by side" i get deepness only, all this made with 3D Vision ON
i try NVIDIA 3D vision player, with that file to, and i only get deepness as well. i don´t know if it is because of the configurations
i´m downloading a H-SBS to try and see if it´s different, if something pop´s up from the screen to the middle of my room
and that´s what i want to know, how to do this? how can i put 3D in real action, like the game for example. my tv is a panasonic tx l42ft60 and my notebook an asus G750JX
i think i have no limitations here
i appreciate a patient mind on this
Thank you very much in advance
[MonitorSizeOverride][Global/Base Profile Tweaks][Depth=IPD]
It is much easier and safer to create more depth than to have 'pop out' effects as those sitting closer to the screen will just see less depth than those sitting further away.
I trick that I use to check the depth of a 3D image or video is what I call the 'Egyptian head trick'.
Simply put, with a still or frozen image on the screen move your head side-2-side while looking at the image. The more depth the 3D image has the more the background will "move" as compared to the foreground of the image. The background should move faster and a greater distance then the foreground. It will seemingly 'rotate' at the point of convergence if the L-R images.
(moving up/down can also cause movement)
The amount of 3D effect we can coax out of 3DVision is much more than what is used in the movies. They limit the effect so that viewers don't experience discomfort.
i7-2600K-4.5Ghz/Corsair H100i/8GB/GTX780SC-SLI/Win7-64/1200W-PSU/Samsung 840-500GB SSD/Coolermaster-Tower/Benq 1080ST @ 100"
is there other players, other options to configure, a tutorial of a player, definicions, anything, that i can put a movie in?
thank you very much in advance
sorry i´m a newbie at this
Likely the best example is Disneys "A Christmas Story" with Jim Carry. For ~15sec at the start of the movie a snow effect will fill the space between you and your screen.
Sadly most consumers/movie goers blindly put on the 3D glasses and assume what they are watching is 3D. However most releases only have a handful (or less) of 3D scenes in them and many are 'conversions' where they attempt to fake the 3D effect (by adding depth) in post production. For example "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides" which was claimed to be shot in 3D has a handful scenes that OUGHT to have pop out (that does not) and when viewed in the Theater and at home show evidence of 'fake 3D methods', very few scenes look 3D or have any realistic depth.
Oddly "Yogi Bear" is one of the best examples of 3D that Holywood has. While there are only a few scenes with brief 'pop out' effects, if you lift your 3D glasses at any time during the movie you'll see two distinct L/R images ghosting on your screen, something that many releases rarely have as the effect is turned down so low or is non existent. (there are plenty of good quality 2D film making techniques that can show an illusion of depth without the image being really 3D)
Some of the pre Avitar 3D releases were pushing and showing off the 3D effect so titles like "Jaws 3D" and other earlier horror and 3D gimick titles may have much more pop out then anything post Avitar. Again sadly "for the sake of the art" movies that had popout were labeled 'cheap gimicks' and got bad press and reviews so in efforts to be 'legitimate' and reduce headaches/eye strain that some viewers complained about you won't find any "in your face" popout that 1970/80/90's 3D releases were known for.
(I'm still waiting for most of them to be re-released on 3D-Blueray for my collection)
i7-2600K-4.5Ghz/Corsair H100i/8GB/GTX780SC-SLI/Win7-64/1200W-PSU/Samsung 840-500GB SSD/Coolermaster-Tower/Benq 1080ST @ 100"
You aren't doing anything wrong, and there aren't any adjustments that you can make to movies. For games, things are wide open. But for movies, they filmed it with a specific idea in mind, and you only get to see what they want you to see.
For some that tend to use pop-out more, look for some IMAX movies in 3D. There is an undersea one in particular that I remember seeing the fish swim outside of the screen.
Acer H5360 (1280x720@120Hz) - ASUS VG248QE with GSync mod - 3D Vision 1&2 - Driver 372.54
GTX 970 - i5-4670K@4.2GHz - 12GB RAM - Win7x64+evilKB2670838 - 4 Disk X25 RAID
SAGER NP9870-S - GTX 980 - i7-6700K - Win10 Pro 1607
Latest 3Dmigoto Release
Bo3b's School for ShaderHackers
picture this, when you see a 3D movie in theatres, the sense of distance between 2 people is perfect, you can see the shoulder of the person almost touching you, with all clearness of the effect,and the other person far away, but you see the body, in 3D.
the manual conversion 2D ---» 3D, doesn´t give you that sense, only some deepness, i don´t know if i´m explaining this clearly.
i see the movies like a 2D to 3D conversion, so no details, like in home theatres.
i tried now the 3D vision player, and selected "side by side left first" on the layout, and choose resolution, on control panel of NVIDIA to 1080 3D HD, and now i see all the shape of things, in Real 3D, not the converted manually one.
now i just want to know where is a player that handles DTS sound, because here goes out in stereo, and if there is a player were i can insert subtitles
Thank You All for your answers in advance.
But. Im a little excited to start watching some 3D now that i've learned how to use a particular setting. Its the setting on a 3DTV that modifies the amount of separation between the images. It has its limitations, but it is a way to make 3D in movies more realistic looking especially on smaller'ish screen and/or when sitting closer to the display. Its called different things on by different manufacturers, "3D perspective" or on mine, "3D effect", but you can tell if its working by observing the screen with the glasses off. I think PowerDVD software has that feature too.
46" Samsung ES7500 3DTV (checkerboard, high FOV as desktop monitor, highly recommend!) - Metro 2033 3D PNG screens - Metro LL filter realism mod - Flugan's Deus Ex:HR Depth changers - Nvidia tech support online form - Nvidia support: 1-800-797-6530
yes i have the option "level of deepness", but that only changes the deep of the image, not the shape of people, and from other objects, the sensation of the thing in your living room it´s not to much, but in real 3D, has i said before, it´s completely different practically you don´t have to do nothing manually on your tv, the change is in NVIDIA control panel, has i said before, and then in the player that you are using, and automaticly stays in real 3D like in a theatre.
the limitations of the player are bad, that´s why i´m asking for a player more powerful
Just about all players I've used play DTS audio, make sure you have the required codecs installed, the Nvidia 3D player does with SBS movies, also if you want the best 3D movies/appearance you really want home projection, best setup there is by far!
thanks for your answer but i can´t configure the audio in 3D vision player, do you know some tutorial for do that, or what options i can choose?
Thank you very much
Because the audio should already be 'configured' by the MKV file (being a container it will hold the video and audio track in their respective formats), get yourself a decent codec pack like Shark007's installed & set up your audio in it as needed, 5.1 analogue or sp-dif pass through if using optical or hdmi output.
thank you all for your kindness responses
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