Right, some of the bundled glasses require a special dongle that is proprietary to a certain make, or even model.
Some can be used with pretty much any cards, since it uses a universal dongle that connects to the VGA-output, and passes the video through to the CRT's VGA cable. As long as you have a DVI-VGA adapter, you could still use those glasses with older drivers (and G80 or older) plus WinXP. You just might get it to work with a 60Hz LCD panel, but the shutterglasses will be shutting out half of that, so you only see 30Hz per eye--such an awful flicker! I've tried it a few times before by mistake when a game defaulted to 60Hz at a strange resolution. Not a pretty sight!
All this talk of 3D glasses had me wondering.... I had to dig them up. I was wrong. The set I got with the Trek game is wired as well. Photo below:
I couldn't find the ASUS set, but I know I got it stashed somewhere. Anyways, I wouldn't be able to use those since I sold the ASUS card itself many years ago but kept the glasses. (long story...) I went through the manual quickly and it says a CRT screen is required, although as you said, it can be set up to work with an LCD but I assume it would be a painful experience.
As for the whole 5xxx vs. GT3xx discussion, l will say what I have said in other similar threads: AMD will not have me back as a customer in regards to their high-end GPUs until they get several issues taken care of.
The two primary reasons being:
1 -
Terrible X-Fire/multi-GPU scaling issues. I was hoping this would get taken care of with the 5xxx series. However, as it stands now SLI offers much more in the way of consistent scaling across more titles. I've seen too many benchmarks in which a single 5850 is faster than two of them, no matter what the resolution. I doubt the issue is on the hardware level. Either way, this is something that AMD needs to work on.
2 -
Build quality issues. Dropping several partners like Powercolor, TuL, and others would go a long way towards working this out. These particular partners as well as several others are famous for cards that have missing caps out of the box, cards that die that within hours of installation, and similar other issues. They tend to "tweak" AMD's own designs (better words would be "cut them down") until the end product is pretty shaky. I understand that AMD not being in the lead (and having serious financial difficulties) leaves them in a position where they can't be picky, but these partners are doing more damage to AMD's reputation than they can imagine. (nVidia did some housecleaning back in 2006, when they dropped several Asian and N. American partners, just for these exact reasons.) Plus AMD themselves have been cutting the corners on their overall designs. (This can be seen the in power regulation circuitry starting with the 3xxx series.) Yes, they are having financial issues, but this is something that needs to be taken care of.
There are several others, like driver issues along the lines of weird instabilities and inconsistencies, unnecessary glut and downright bugs, as well as a very slow driver release cycle.
I will still keep AMD solutions in mind when it comes to lower-end stuff like media boxes, laptops (when the choice is between AMD's GPU and Intel's), however for my high end gaming machines and workstations, nVidia is the only choice as I see it. (And before anyone gets started with "but my card" ... I have personally owned many, MANY, Radeon/AMD GPU's including some of the recent ones, so I speak from experience.)