On Mon, Mar 5, 2012 at 8:48 PM, Jason Daly <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 03/03/2012 10:38 AM, Christian Buchner wrote:
>
>> Geforce cards support stereoscopic 3D through HDMI as part of the
>> 3DVision support for DirectX gaming only.
>> It is called 3DTV Play and it isn't free (there's a 14 day trial
>> version available). And this does not include OpenGL.
>>
>
> Sure, but that's a different animal than what Erin is after.  3DTV play
> assumes the game wasn't written for 3D output and synthesizes the left and
> right channels based on the depth buffer.  It also provides a Blu-ray 3D
> player (and I'm sure the fee is at least partly to cover Nvidia's licensing
> costs for this).
>
> From what I've read in several forums.  If you create the 1280x1470 format
> (or 1920x2205 format) directly, you can get a GeForce card to render 3D
> content on a 3D monitor.


Jason, could you post links to this info, please? I am interested in that
as well. I am afraid that the OpenGL driver on a GeForce will refuse to
generate the correct HDMI signal "tags" for the monitor to recognize,
because you aren't running Quadro. If it was possible, it would be quite
trivial to bypass the "no stereo on GeForce" crippling by Nvidia.

Regards,

Jan
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