Virtual & Augmented Reality and 3D - Page 157
Explore the latest in virtual reality (VR), augmented reality (AR), and 3D tech, including gaming headsets, immersive experiences, and hardware updates. - Page 157
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Is nVidia choosing the wrong tech for 3D Glasses?
nVidia is still having a rough time, Not with GPUs and MCH chips. No this time it seems they are going in the wrong direction with their newest 3D Glasses.
If you have ever tried a pair of these (not just from nVidia) they are not exactly the easiest thing on the eyes. They usually consist of a pair of glasses that are little more than small displays that alternate the image between your town eyes creating a 3D Effect. The last pair I used gave me a headache that lasted a couple of days.
According to Charlie Demerjian; nVidia is using a similar technology to the migraine inducing ones I remember. The Green team are choosing this technology at a time when everyone else is moving away from active glasses for that very reason.
Read more at The Inquirer.
Continue reading: Is nVidia choosing the wrong tech for 3D Glasses? (full post)
PC store in Tokyo revives Dreamcast as a PC
There's a lot of popular well known mods used to glamour up the look of a PC enclosure such as adding side windows, lighting, uv cabling etc. and sometimes you'll even see people go the full hog, converting old VHS recorders or boom boxes, radios etc. into PCs.
But what you certainly don't see every day (and I believe this is a first of its kind), is this number :-
Continue reading: PC store in Tokyo revives Dreamcast as a PC (full post)
ATI All-In-Wonder has been revived
AMD has today resurrected the once highly popular All-in-Wonder lineup of hybrid solutions. The new card is simply dubbed the All-in-Wonder HD; the first ATI based graphics card ever with HD tuner support embedded.
The graphics card itself is based around the 55nm Radeon HD 3650 with 120 Stream processors, a 128-bit DDR2 memory interface, DirectX 10.1 support and a unified video decoder for HD video decoding at the hardware level.
The tuner implementation comprises support for analog TV, free-to-air HDTV and ClearQAM unencrypted cable. Furthermore, there is the added benefit of hardware MPEG-2 encoding.
As far as the I/O goes; we see the inclusion of both DVI and HDMI outputs as well as a daughter card with S-Video, stereo-in and component video connectivity; this making it an ideal partner for HTPCs. Word has it we will first see these new cards appear from partners Diamond and VisionTek by late July at an RRP of $199 US.
Continue reading: ATI All-In-Wonder has been revived (full post)
Seagate - Showcase Series 1TB for DVRs
Primarily aimed at DVR users with full compatibility for Motorola's eSATA equipped HD digital video recorder/set-top portfolio, Seagate has just announced a 1 Terabyte External DVR Drive as part of their new Showcase Video Library series. This unit allows consumers to be able to record up to 200 additional hours of HD movies or 1,000 hours of standard definition content via USB2.0 or eSATA connectivity.
Seagate is working with Motorola, the leader in digital set-tops with over 73 million shipped, to deliver external storage solutions for DVRs. By connecting a Seagate Showcase product with its included eSATA cable, the capacity of these DVRs can instantly be increased - eliminating the need to delete your favorite movies or shows. The 1TB Seagate Showcase drive can be seen exclusively in the Motorola booth # 1405 during The Cable Show '08 at the Morial Convention Center in New Orleans.
For full details on the 1TB external DVR solution and Showcase series, head over to this section on Seagate's website.
Continue reading: Seagate - Showcase Series 1TB for DVRs (full post)
Zalman finally launches 3D displays
At Computex earlier this year Zalman was showing its upcoming 3D displays and they've finally launched them. We're looking at a 19 and a 22-incher and we're not sure if Zalman has come up with Trimon name as a play on Trinitron or Pokemon. Either which way, these new 3D display requires you to wear a pair of glasses for them to work and you need to use an Nvidia graphics card.
You might wonder about the latter requirement and the answer is simple, Zalman relies on Nvidia's 3D stereoscopic driver, which is flaky at best. At least the glasses you get with the Zalman displays look more like a pair of naff shades than something really nerdy as early types of stereoscopic glasses with LCD shutters used to be like.
Continue reading: Zalman finally launches 3D displays (full post)
2900GT from Club 3D out now
Club 3D has announced the availability of its HD2900 GT Heatpipe graphics card and the specs aren't far off from what we reported on here. The specifications don't differ significantly from what we already knew and the Club 3D card looks very much like a reference card with a sticker on it. None the less, the Radeon HD2900 GT is here.
As we mentioned, the GPU is clocked at 600MHz and it's based on the ATI R600 GPU. It has 240 stream processors and a 256-bit memory interface. It's of course a 256MB card and the GDDR3 memory is again as we told you earlier, clocked at 800MHz or 1,600MHz effectively.