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Nvidia's 3D Vision reaches critical mass

qubit

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Nvidia's 3D Vision has reached a critical milestone, with over 1,000 products now supporting the popular platform.

"Industry adoption of 3D Vision has outpaced even our best expectations," Nvidia spokesperson Andrew Fear told TG Daily in an e-mailed statement.

"Less than two years after the introduction of 3D Vision at CES 2009, there are now 1,000 products in its ecosystem, including notebook and desktop PCs, displays, TVs, projectors, GPUs, video applications, cameras and games."

Looks like AMD has some catching up to do.

Read the rest at TG Daily.
 
Hey what's with the trolls? :shadedshu

Make an intelligent comment or STFU. Thanks.
 
Meh. Any "3D" that requires wearing glasses is just that, "meh."
 
Agreed. I am by far not a fanboy (I haven't had a nVidia card in years, so if anything, I am a fanboy for the other team), but the above is just unnecessary. This an intellegent tech forum, bring intellect to the conversation or go home.

On-topic: 1000 products in two years. That doesn't seem to be such a critical milestone, but I have played with 3D vision on a friends rig, and I must admit, it was a lot less of a gimmick than I thought it was. It worked, and was pretty damn cool.
 
Very impressive that they have this many products supporting 3D, but even being a larger Tech Head than anyone else I know (and a lot of my friends have been Tech Heads for years), I still yet to know a single person who has a 3D setup. I'd really like one myself, but with glasses and other costs, it's just too much to justify, once prices drop on hardware, this could be a good advantage.

Hey what's with the trolls? :shadedshu

Make an intelligent comment or STFU. Thanks.

It's the natural of things, check the Catalyst 10.10 thread, goes both ways sadly :/
 
well 3d vision does look interesting I just can't be bothered to seup a media pc right now so i'll hold off until I can.
 
There was 1000's of "Vista Ready" products too..... just saying :laugh:
 
If I had the spare cash, I'd score a 3d setup. Based from the looks on the faces of those who try it on during that tech demo, Id say it should be quite an experience.
 
On-topic: 1000 products in two years. That doesn't seem to be such a critical milestone, but I have played with 3D vision on a friends rig, and I must admit, it was a lot less of a gimmick than I thought it was. It worked, and was pretty damn cool.

I read somewhere that people experience headaches when using the 3D tech for longer periods of time. Can anyone comment (intelligently) on that?
 
I read somewhere that people experience headaches when using the 3D tech for longer periods of time. Can anyone comment (intelligently) on that?
Probably from the significant drop in fps when its turned on..
 
Hey what's with the trolls? :shadedshu

Make an intelligent comment or STFU. Thanks.

Because any monitor that supports 3d vision supports AMD3d too.



Before making any comments or new posts perhaps some intelligent thinking should be done first :laugh:


Just teasing you :p but still, lame news is lame. AMD has no catching up to do.
 
After watching 5 mins of 3D content, my eyes turn into a waterfall...
 
I read somewhere that people experience headaches when using the 3D tech for longer periods of time. Can anyone comment (intelligently) on that?

I only played for about 2 hours and did not have any issue. My buddy has never mentioned it (but he probably wouldn't because he s spent so much on it).:laugh: The glasses were a little uncomfortable, but other than that, it was a VERY enjoyable experience. Visually stunning!

Edit: I thought I would add that the only games that I played on it were BFBC2 and JC2. He has a GTX480 connected to a Samsung monitor (IIRC 23", but IDK model number).
 
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After watching 5 mins of 3D content, my eyes turn into a waterfall...

After watching Shrek 3, I felt dizzy and my son puked. I really liked it but...
 
After watching 5 mins of 3D content, my eyes turn into a waterfall...

After watching 5 mins of 3D content, I had to put on the glasses again on my glasses (care of the Department of Redundancy Department) because it's out of position already or has fallen off.
 
Looks like AMD has some catching up to do.

Read the rest at TG Daily.

Trolled because you're quoting directly a company sales pitch. It's like me quoting AMD rep asying, "we're the market leader in DX 11 cards". That would get flamed by the NV crowd.

More important issue is, will it still be relevant when it's cheap enough for the masses or will other 3D tech that doesn't use glasses be better for all? Like eyefinity it has limited appeal for now.
 
Apparently problems are common enough Samsung is covering their ass.
Samsung 3D warning

Looks like 3D has some catching up in general.
 
Agreed. I am by far not a fanboy (I haven't had a nVidia card in years, so if anything, I am a fanboy for the other team), but the above is just unnecessary. This an intellegent tech forum, bring intellect to the conversation or go home.

On-topic: 1000 products in two years. That doesn't seem to be such a critical milestone, but I have played with 3D vision on a friends rig, and I must admit, it was a lot less of a gimmick than I thought it was. It worked, and was pretty damn cool.

Yes, I bought the 3D Vision glasses and monitor bundle, which worked very well... until burglars broke in and stole the monitor. I still have the glasses though. I didn't get a replacement monitor yet, because there aren't any models out at the moment that I'm really happy with (the Samsung 2233RZ in the bundle had a lot of shortcomings I don't want to have to put up with again). The Acer 245HQ had a dreadful ghosting effect on the desktop (I'm not talking movement here) which made everything look a little blurred. It looks like a design fault to me, because the demo one in the shop turned out to look the same so I got a refund on it.


I read somewhere that people experience headaches when using the 3D tech for longer periods of time. Can anyone comment (intelligently) on that?

I've not had headaches, but it does tend to make me go crosseyed. One eye is a bit weaker than the other which seems to be the cause of it. The worst is when I view a still picture, when it's almost impossible for me to lock onto the image and see two instead.

This also happens in a game when I haven't started moving yet, but I can lock on the instant movement starts - and then the effect is awesome. :rockout: However, having used it for a while, you sort of get used to it so you don't notice so much that it's 3D and it's actually harder to shoot accurately than plain old 2D mode and there's no dropped frames causing this, because I played old games that are easy on the hardware (see specs).

It can also induce a vague sense of nausea, but it was very slight for me and went away, so it didn't ruin the experience for me.

The glasses are a pain though and don't sit especially comfortably over my prescription glasses, but are tolerable.

Other downsides are darkening of the picture by the LCD shutters and a ghosting effect, where the image intended for the other eye breaks through a bit, because the LCD is never completely black. This is most noticeable on bright things such as lights and brightly coloured vertical shapes.

Because any monitor that supports 3d vision supports AMD3d too.



Before making any comments or new posts perhaps some intelligent thinking should be done first :laugh:


Just teasing you :p but still, lame news is lame. AMD has no catching up to do.

Waddya mean teasing?! :eek: lol ya good. :toast:

I'm surprised it's lame news. I saw it there and thought it worth discussing.

However, thinking about it, as the monitors are standard 120Hz screens, the games are unmodified and the 3D effect is produced in the drivers, I guess AMD would have just the same market share as nvidia, unless there's some technical aspect of it that I'm unaware of.


Trolled because you're quoting directly a company sales pitch. It's like me quoting AMD rep asying, "we're the market leader in DX 11 cards". That would get flamed by the NV crowd.

More important issue is, will it still be relevant when it's cheap enough for the masses or will other 3D tech that doesn't use glasses be better for all? Like eyefinity it has limited appeal for now.

The article quotes from nvidia, but it doesn't look like a PR piece to me. Anyway, no one should be trolling people's threads. They can see say they think it's lame if they don't agree, or preferably give a reasoned response. Saying "meh" is just offensive and not in the spirit of TPU.

Apparently problems are common enough Samsung is covering their ass.
Samsung 3D warning

Looks like 3D has some catching up in general.

They have gone a bit overboard with the disclaimers on that one. They make it sound like you're taking your life in your hands with that!
 
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Since I wear perscription glasses, I'm in the "spectical redundancy" crowd. I'll pass.

On an unrelated side note, re-read the Samsung disclaimer and replace the words "watching (or viewing) TV" with "reading TPU". lol
 
I read somewhere that people experience headaches when using the 3D tech for longer periods of time. Can anyone comment (intelligently) on that?

Watching 3D then taking off the glasses and looking at the true image, I could easily see that for some. If people eyes pick up on the split images, its going to make their brain go haywire, so most likely will come down to that solely. If you really want to find out how it effects you, just go down to a Best Buy, most of them have a Theater Setup with a 3D TV and some glasses.
 
meh, i feel dizzy after playing with my friend 3D monitor


and btw if you want to use normal 3D tv on nvdia card you must pay for the driver to enable it
 
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