Stereoscopic 3D option doesn't show up in the control panel. In fact a lot of options don't.
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I tried repeatedly to look at the product page for your laptop at Dell's website, but for the page kept hanging.
Are you sure that it's a 3D Vision capable configuration/build? If you did not order it with the 120Hz screen, it's not.
Does it come with a built in emitter and Nvidia glasses?
Maybe this thread may help.
https://forums.geforce.com/default/topic/491359/?comment=3521742
Have you found a solution to your problems ?
I am receiving my Panasonic TX-P50GT60 3d hdtv tomorrow and I did quite a bit of googling to be ready for the problems I knew would come.... :-(
you probably have resolved this, but.... The way I heard, the 3d vision driver is not actually installed with the Nvidia card. You have to look it up in the Nvidia folder on your local hard drive, and then install it manually. When connecting to the external 3d display the stereoscopic options would still not show up in Nvidia control panel untill you made the 3d display primary + switched off the laptop display. Only after this would you see the stereoscopic settings in the Nvidia control panel, as they are associative with the current display. I figure that if my gtx 780m will work on my system through the iGPU, so should an external screen set to primary. If the 3d screen is the only option ??
From there on people have reported being able to playback 3d blu ray material + play 1080p 3d games( Although at low fps or hz) 720p is supposed to work fine.
of course, I can't confirm this untill tomorrow when I get my TV, or if by any chance any of you happen to see my post before that.
By the way I'm on an optimus - based clevo p157sm/sager p8255 with a i7 4800mq + Nvidia gtx780m.
Have you found a solution to your problems ?
I am receiving my Panasonic TX-P50GT60 3d hdtv tomorrow and I did quite a bit of googling to be ready for the problems I knew would come.... :-(
you probably have resolved this, but.... The way I heard, the 3d vision driver is not actually installed with the Nvidia card. You have to look it up in the Nvidia folder on your local hard drive, and then install it manually. When connecting to the external 3d display the stereoscopic options would still not show up in Nvidia control panel untill you made the 3d display primary + switched off the laptop display. Only after this would you see the stereoscopic settings in the Nvidia control panel, as they are associative with the current display. I figure that if my gtx 780m will work on my system through the iGPU, so should an external screen set to primary. If the 3d screen is the only option ??
From there on people have reported being able to playback 3d blu ray material + play 1080p 3d games( Although at low fps or hz) 720p is supposed to work fine.
of course, I can't confirm this untill tomorrow when I get my TV, or if by any chance any of you happen to see my post before that.
By the way I'm on an optimus - based clevo p157sm/sager p8255 with a i7 4800mq + Nvidia gtx780m.
Hey guys,
I have lenovo y510p and nvidia 3d kit,
But i can't use them for 3d gaming due to stereoscopic isn,t available on nvidia control panel..
What should i do so that i can play game in 3d?
Please help me, thanks before
Hey guys,
I have lenovo y510p and nvidia 3d kit,
But i can't use them for 3d gaming due to stereoscopic isn,t available on nvidia control panel..
What should i do so that i can play game in 3d?
Please help me, thanks before
Been looking for a solution to my 3D stereoscopic problem recently, Having just purchased a new 860m Laptop and having a LG Passive 3DTV i was expecting my laptop to be able to output 3D to 3DTV.
There's no reason why it shouldn't work right? Passive 3D still only uses 60hz therefore even if the Nvidia needs to go thru the Intel framebuffer, it won't be doing anything it's not already doing within specification?
Now here's my tests, I also have a Dell L702x which is Optimus enabled but the HDMI is actually connect to the Nvidia GPU so on the Dell I CAN do 3DVision on my Passive 3DTV no problems, without the IR or active shutter glasses hardware due to it being Passive tech.
Now on this Dell everything is perfect except of course the GPU which is outdated, which is where the new Laptop comes in, the 860m gtx performing about 3 times faster than the 555m in the Dell, I'm expecting huge smiles on my face being able to do 60fps solid while in 3D Stereoscopic right?
But nooo... the HDMI port on the new laptop is still directly connected to the Intel GPU.
So then I discover Tri-Def, now using Tri-Def the new laptop can do what I expected but not quite at the quality compared to the Native 3D Vision of Nvidias offering. And of course there is a price.
But if Tri-Def can do it, why does Nvidia say "THERE IS NOTHING YOU CAN DO"?
This brings me to think it is possible at least to get some sort of 3d working in both Active and Passive.
Only solutions I can think of:
Nvidia or Intel Patching Graphics driver to allow some sort of pass thru to enable 3D stereoscopic and let user decide if they have the right hardware to enable or disable. On Active Shutter this will limit frame rates sync to 30 rather than 60, better than nothing? I've read that Intels GFX already support 3D Stereoscopic somewhere so maybe it CAN still handle 120hz screens.
Nvidia to make their own software work like Tri-Def.
Get a Laptop which only uses Nvidia D-GPU.
Use Tri-Def.
Wheres the support consumers are suppose to be getting!
Been looking for a solution to my 3D stereoscopic problem recently, Having just purchased a new 860m Laptop and having a LG Passive 3DTV i was expecting my laptop to be able to output 3D to 3DTV.
There's no reason why it shouldn't work right? Passive 3D still only uses 60hz therefore even if the Nvidia needs to go thru the Intel framebuffer, it won't be doing anything it's not already doing within specification?
Now here's my tests, I also have a Dell L702x which is Optimus enabled but the HDMI is actually connect to the Nvidia GPU so on the Dell I CAN do 3DVision on my Passive 3DTV no problems, without the IR or active shutter glasses hardware due to it being Passive tech.
Now on this Dell everything is perfect except of course the GPU which is outdated, which is where the new Laptop comes in, the 860m gtx performing about 3 times faster than the 555m in the Dell, I'm expecting huge smiles on my face being able to do 60fps solid while in 3D Stereoscopic right?
But nooo... the HDMI port on the new laptop is still directly connected to the Intel GPU.
So then I discover Tri-Def, now using Tri-Def the new laptop can do what I expected but not quite at the quality compared to the Native 3D Vision of Nvidias offering. And of course there is a price.
But if Tri-Def can do it, why does Nvidia say "THERE IS NOTHING YOU CAN DO"?
This brings me to think it is possible at least to get some sort of 3d working in both Active and Passive.
Only solutions I can think of:
Nvidia or Intel Patching Graphics driver to allow some sort of pass thru to enable 3D stereoscopic and let user decide if they have the right hardware to enable or disable. On Active Shutter this will limit frame rates sync to 30 rather than 60, better than nothing? I've read that Intels GFX already support 3D Stereoscopic somewhere so maybe it CAN still handle 120hz screens.
Nvidia to make their own software work like Tri-Def.
Get a Laptop which only uses Nvidia D-GPU.
Use Tri-Def.
Wheres the support consumers are suppose to be getting!
Are you sure that it's a 3D Vision capable configuration/build? If you did not order it with the 120Hz screen, it's not.
Does it come with a built in emitter and Nvidia glasses?
Maybe this thread may help.
https://forums.geforce.com/default/topic/491359/?comment=3521742
I am receiving my Panasonic TX-P50GT60 3d hdtv tomorrow and I did quite a bit of googling to be ready for the problems I knew would come.... :-(
you probably have resolved this, but.... The way I heard, the 3d vision driver is not actually installed with the Nvidia card. You have to look it up in the Nvidia folder on your local hard drive, and then install it manually. When connecting to the external 3d display the stereoscopic options would still not show up in Nvidia control panel untill you made the 3d display primary + switched off the laptop display. Only after this would you see the stereoscopic settings in the Nvidia control panel, as they are associative with the current display. I figure that if my gtx 780m will work on my system through the iGPU, so should an external screen set to primary. If the 3d screen is the only option ??
From there on people have reported being able to playback 3d blu ray material + play 1080p 3d games( Although at low fps or hz) 720p is supposed to work fine.
of course, I can't confirm this untill tomorrow when I get my TV, or if by any chance any of you happen to see my post before that.
By the way I'm on an optimus - based clevo p157sm/sager p8255 with a i7 4800mq + Nvidia gtx780m.
I have lenovo y510p and nvidia 3d kit,
But i can't use them for 3d gaming due to stereoscopic isn,t available on nvidia control panel..
What should i do so that i can play game in 3d?
Please help me, thanks before
There's no reason why it shouldn't work right? Passive 3D still only uses 60hz therefore even if the Nvidia needs to go thru the Intel framebuffer, it won't be doing anything it's not already doing within specification?
Now here's my tests, I also have a Dell L702x which is Optimus enabled but the HDMI is actually connect to the Nvidia GPU so on the Dell I CAN do 3DVision on my Passive 3DTV no problems, without the IR or active shutter glasses hardware due to it being Passive tech.
Now on this Dell everything is perfect except of course the GPU which is outdated, which is where the new Laptop comes in, the 860m gtx performing about 3 times faster than the 555m in the Dell, I'm expecting huge smiles on my face being able to do 60fps solid while in 3D Stereoscopic right?
But nooo... the HDMI port on the new laptop is still directly connected to the Intel GPU.
So then I discover Tri-Def, now using Tri-Def the new laptop can do what I expected but not quite at the quality compared to the Native 3D Vision of Nvidias offering. And of course there is a price.
But if Tri-Def can do it, why does Nvidia say "THERE IS NOTHING YOU CAN DO"?
This brings me to think it is possible at least to get some sort of 3d working in both Active and Passive.
Only solutions I can think of:
Nvidia or Intel Patching Graphics driver to allow some sort of pass thru to enable 3D stereoscopic and let user decide if they have the right hardware to enable or disable. On Active Shutter this will limit frame rates sync to 30 rather than 60, better than nothing? I've read that Intels GFX already support 3D Stereoscopic somewhere so maybe it CAN still handle 120hz screens.
Nvidia to make their own software work like Tri-Def.
Get a Laptop which only uses Nvidia D-GPU.
Use Tri-Def.
Wheres the support consumers are suppose to be getting!
Intel I7-4810m | 32GB Ram | GTX 980m 8GB | Crucial M550 1.5TB SSDs