Not sure but (especially the first point is often overlooked as far as I remember)

1) *On Windows 10, make sure “3D display mode” is set to “On”* in Windows settings: Settings --> Display --> Advanced 1.

2) Make sure OpenGL is turned on: <nvidia control panel> --> Manage 3D Settings --> Global Presets --> OpenGL rendering GPU --> <choose your graphics cards>

3) Make sure Stereo is turned on: <nvidia control panel> --> Manage 3D Settings --> Global Presets --> Stereo - Enabled > <choose on>

Good luck

Jeroen

Am 19.03.18 um 13:08 schrieb Christoph Parthier:
Hello,

I'm currently preparing a set of new Windows10-workstations to be used with 
COOT and other macromolecular software supporting quad-buffered OpenGL Stereo 
with NVDIAs 3DVision2 kit using USB IR emitters (without 3-pin mini DIN cable 
connected) and a NVIDIA quadro K620 (low profile) graphics card.

The currently installed  NVIDIA driver version is 391.03 (64-bit Win10) 
downloaded from Nvidia (after latest Win10 updates).

Quad-buffered Stereo using NVidia 3D-Vision glasses is enabled and working 
nicely e.g. for PyMOL 2.1.0 and the NVIDIA demos (e.g. stereoscopic picture 
viewer).

Unfortunately WinCoot crashes and terminates when enabling the 'Hardware 
stereo' option in the menu 'Draw/Stereo...'. I tried WinCoot versions 0.86, 
0.87, 0.88 and the current 0.89. All behave the same.

Worth noting:
- Pymol (working stereo) and WinCoot (not...) both use the same profile for the 
3D settings in the NVIDIA control panel.
- When setting the 'Stereo - Enable' to 'Off' in the NVIDIA control panel 
(Manage 3D settings) WinCoot does NOT crash when enabling the 'Hardware stereo' 
in Coot, but, of course, it will display not in stereo. So I assume the crash 
really occurs when turning the 'quad-buffered' stereo on in WinCoot.

Any advice? Any debuggung info I can provide?

Thanks,
Christoph


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