NVIDIA GeForce 3D stereo glasses to arrive soon

Posted on Thursday, November 06 2008 @ 21:56 CET by Thomas De Maesschalck
DigiTimes heard NVIDIA will start shipping GeForce 3D stereo glasses before the end of the year. These glasses and a driver from NVIDIA will enable you to play all your games in 3D, the only catch is that you need to have a "true" 120Hz display. Currently, there's only one display that has this feature and that's a Mitsubishi 73-inch 3D Ready 1080p DLP TV.
Once the product is launched, Nvidia will not ship the product to all of its partners but will instead choose a sole distributor in each market zone to prevent price competition, and the product will be mainly targeted to system integrators (SI), especially in the China and South Korea markets, the sources explained.

However, if Nvidia does begin shipping the product this year, the company will not see much of a boost in its sales of related graphics cards, as there is currently only one display on the market that officially supports the product, and that product is a TV, not an LCD monitor.

Based on information from Nvidia's website and sources familiar with the product's development, the GeForce Stereoscopic 3D glasses can only be supported by LCD monitors that feature "true" 120Hz monitor panels. The sources explained that some LCD monitor vendors are marketing 120Hz monitors that actually only overdrive 60Hz monitor panels, meaning that while the display is refreshed at a double rate, the image remains the same. Nvidia requires true 120Hz panels to support its 3D stereo glasses, as a different image (one for each eye) is used for each refresh, and displays that support the technology will bear a 3D Ready logo so that consumers know which models can be used.

The catch is that currently there is only one 3D Ready device on the market, a Mitsubishi 73-inch 3D Ready 1080p DLP TV. While ViewSonic and Samsung Electronics have demonstrated LCD monitors that bear the 3D Ready logo, neither of those vendors are shipping the products in the market. According to the sources in the graphics card industry, ViewSonic will not begin mass production of its monitors until January 2009.

Those sources also surmised that the high price of the glasses during the initial stage and the untested use of 3D glasses will also be hurdles Nvidia needs to overcome before the product can become a success.


About the Author

Thomas De Maesschalck

Thomas has been messing with computer since early childhood and firmly believes the Internet is the best thing since sliced bread. Enjoys playing with new tech, is fascinated by science, and passionate about financial markets. When not behind a computer, he can be found with running shoes on or lifting heavy weights in the weight room.



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