Thanks for the quick reply. Tried that and wasn't real comfortable with their answer, however the price they quoted me (about $75) seemed to indicate that I only need the glasses. I am not going to purchase them from Dell anyway, as I want to get the OEM Brand, not their "Universal" ones. I am not familiar at all with the 3D process, but I think that the laptop would have the transmitter and I would only need the glasses.
Thanks for the quick reply. Tried that and wasn't real comfortable with their answer, however the price they quoted me (about $75) seemed to indicate that I only need the glasses. I am not going to purchase them from Dell anyway, as I want to get the OEM Brand, not their "Universal" ones. I am not familiar at all with the 3D process, but I think that the laptop would have the transmitter and I would only need the glasses.
Assuming the laptops emitter is compatible with the NVidia 3D Glasses, you just need the glasses. But I personally would verify that before spending $100 on the NVidia glasses.
Assuming the laptops emitter is compatible with the NVidia 3D Glasses, you just need the glasses. But I personally would verify that before spending $100 on the NVidia glasses.
Again, thank you folks for the quick and helpful replies. I will have this video card, NVIDIA® GeForce® GT 555M 3GB. Would this indicate that the Nvidia 3D glasses would work (kit not required)?
Again, thank you folks for the quick and helpful replies. I will have this video card, NVIDIA® GeForce® GT 555M 3GB. Would this indicate that the Nvidia 3D glasses would work (kit not required)?
Unfortunately the video card doesn't tell you, the emitter has to be compatible with the glasses.
My assumption is they use the same protocol as NVidia, but they needn't.
Thank you!
Steve
Thank you!
Steve
My Blog
My assumption is they use the same protocol as NVidia, but they needn't.
My assumption is they use the same protocol as NVidia, but they needn't.
My Blog