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On 1/8/2016 11:40 AM, scott wrote:
>>> If you've got a TV/monitor that works with passive glasses then give it
>>> a shot, you might get lucky. Often the TV will have a setting to
>>> override the 3D image format (side-by-side, interlaced etc) - you just
>>> need to match you POV images to the format the TV is expected,
>>> side-by-side is probably easiest to create.
>>
>> Yes, you need a TV/monitor that is 3D Ready. If it is a monitor you need
>> a GPU and drivers. You will also need a transmitter to sync the glasses.
>
> You are talking of active (shutter) glasses. Passive (polarising)
> glasses do not need a transmitter or any sync, the glasses are literally
> just two bits of polariser film stuck to some cardboard (hence very
> cheap). Obviously an "active" type TV will not work with passive
> glasses, or vice-versa.
>
Oh! I've not seen a 3D film at the cinema. I obviously havn't thought
about it much, Supplying shutter glasses would be a big layout as well.
--
Regards
Stephen
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