David Cooke from nvidea video- 3d 3d stereo with a filter
I don't know if this has been seen by many but a filter over top a Flat panel tv and polarized glasses. He does mention the Zalman but also the near future for otherproducts. Might be glimmer of hope yet from Nvidea.
I don't know if this has been seen by many but a filter over top a Flat panel tv and polarized glasses. He does mention the Zalman but also the near future for otherproducts. Might be glimmer of hope yet from Nvidea.
[quote name='iamcanadian2' date='Jun 18 2008, 09:48 PM']I don't know if this has been seen by many but a filter over top a Flat panel tv and polarized glasses. He does mention the Zalman but also the near future for otherproducts. Might be glimmer of hope yet from Nvidea.
I was there! The screen is a SpectronIQ interlaced HDTV solution. Similar idea to the Zalman monitor, but on a larger scale. Only the software belongs to NVIDIA.
[quote name='iamcanadian2' date='Jun 18 2008, 09:48 PM']I don't know if this has been seen by many but a filter over top a Flat panel tv and polarized glasses. He does mention the Zalman but also the near future for otherproducts. Might be glimmer of hope yet from Nvidea.
I was there! The screen is a SpectronIQ interlaced HDTV solution. Similar idea to the Zalman monitor, but on a larger scale. Only the software belongs to NVIDIA.
I would hope there was more to it than just sticking a film over an existing display, although if it works, it works. Doesn't really matter how they do it. I would very much like to see S3D monitors go mainstream and I think these interlaced sets (like the Zalman solution) have the chance of hitting mainstream prices in the near future. It appears it would be cost-effective to produce large screen models (Zalman already has shown a 32" model coming in August). So its going to be interesting so see what products Nvidia will be endorsing later this year. I don't think its going to be just Zalman for much longer.
Also, if you are still gaming on a CRT w/ the old Nvidia drivers then just pick up a pair of these glasses for $10 (and they're better than the ED glasses):
[url="http://www.xforce3d.com/"]http://www.xforce3d.com/[/url]
I would hope there was more to it than just sticking a film over an existing display, although if it works, it works. Doesn't really matter how they do it. I would very much like to see S3D monitors go mainstream and I think these interlaced sets (like the Zalman solution) have the chance of hitting mainstream prices in the near future. It appears it would be cost-effective to produce large screen models (Zalman already has shown a 32" model coming in August). So its going to be interesting so see what products Nvidia will be endorsing later this year. I don't think its going to be just Zalman for much longer.
Also, if you are still gaming on a CRT w/ the old Nvidia drivers then just pick up a pair of these glasses for $10 (and they're better than the ED glasses):
[quote name='cybereality' date='Jun 19 2008, 03:00 PM']I would hope there was more to it than just sticking a film over an existing display, although if it works, it works.
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[/quote]
Not hard to do, 2 ways I can think of to do it (and a couple permutations as well).
1. Polarization rotating shield rotates every other line (or a checkerboard pattern) to the other angle of linear polarization.
2. The same thing, but with a circular polarizer on top of that so that you can tilt your head.
3. The linear is built into the front and rear polarizers (on all LCDs already, just now with even-odd line 90° rotation)
Seems cool though, I want one and I want it to just work. No sense overcharging us for something so darn simple (heck I built one myself with $0.50 glasses and $150 worth of LCD monitors I bought on ebay, the same principle**). If anyone would just offer it already across all cards and OS's then they could differentiate themselves quickly.
[quote name='cybereality' date='Jun 19 2008, 03:00 PM']I would hope there was more to it than just sticking a film over an existing display, although if it works, it works.
[snapback]396475[/snapback]
Not hard to do, 2 ways I can think of to do it (and a couple permutations as well).
1. Polarization rotating shield rotates every other line (or a checkerboard pattern) to the other angle of linear polarization.
2. The same thing, but with a circular polarizer on top of that so that you can tilt your head.
3. The linear is built into the front and rear polarizers (on all LCDs already, just now with even-odd line 90° rotation)
Seems cool though, I want one and I want it to just work. No sense overcharging us for something so darn simple (heck I built one myself with $0.50 glasses and $150 worth of LCD monitors I bought on ebay, the same principle**). If anyone would just offer it already across all cards and OS's then they could differentiate themselves quickly.
[url="http://blip.tv/file/686253"]http://blip.tv/file/686253[/url]
http://blip.tv/file/686253
[url="http://blip.tv/file/686253"]http://blip.tv/file/686253[/url]
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[/quote]
I was there! The screen is a SpectronIQ interlaced HDTV solution. Similar idea to the Zalman monitor, but on a larger scale. Only the software belongs to NVIDIA.
Regards,
Chopper
http://blip.tv/file/686253
I was there! The screen is a SpectronIQ interlaced HDTV solution. Similar idea to the Zalman monitor, but on a larger scale. Only the software belongs to NVIDIA.
Regards,
Chopper
Oh Well wait and wait . just my 97s drivers are getting tired. I broke 1 of my ED glasses and I am hesitant about buying another set.
Oh Well wait and wait . just my 97s drivers are getting tired. I broke 1 of my ED glasses and I am hesitant about buying another set.
Also, if you are still gaming on a CRT w/ the old Nvidia drivers then just pick up a pair of these glasses for $10 (and they're better than the ED glasses):
[url="http://www.xforce3d.com/"]http://www.xforce3d.com/[/url]
Also, if you are still gaming on a CRT w/ the old Nvidia drivers then just pick up a pair of these glasses for $10 (and they're better than the ED glasses):
http://www.xforce3d.com/
check my blog - cybereality.com
[right][snapback]396475[/snapback][/right]
[/quote]
Not hard to do, 2 ways I can think of to do it (and a couple permutations as well).
1. Polarization rotating shield rotates every other line (or a checkerboard pattern) to the other angle of linear polarization.
2. The same thing, but with a circular polarizer on top of that so that you can tilt your head.
3. The linear is built into the front and rear polarizers (on all LCDs already, just now with even-odd line 90° rotation)
Seems cool though, I want one and I want it to just work. No sense overcharging us for something so darn simple (heck I built one myself with $0.50 glasses and $150 worth of LCD monitors I bought on ebay, the same principle**). If anyone would just offer it already across all cards and OS's then they could differentiate themselves quickly.
** [url="http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=32547"]http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=32547[/url]
[url="http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=32547&st=40#"]http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=32547&st=40#[/url]
Not hard to do, 2 ways I can think of to do it (and a couple permutations as well).
1. Polarization rotating shield rotates every other line (or a checkerboard pattern) to the other angle of linear polarization.
2. The same thing, but with a circular polarizer on top of that so that you can tilt your head.
3. The linear is built into the front and rear polarizers (on all LCDs already, just now with even-odd line 90° rotation)
Seems cool though, I want one and I want it to just work. No sense overcharging us for something so darn simple (heck I built one myself with $0.50 glasses and $150 worth of LCD monitors I bought on ebay, the same principle**). If anyone would just offer it already across all cards and OS's then they could differentiate themselves quickly.
** http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=32547
http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=32547&st=40#