I misstated something earlier, and I would like to correct the record:
Magic Eye books instruct you on using wall-eyed stereo (with excellent
instructions, highly recommended!). Currently (with computer monitors) I
find cross-eyed much easier (and I think more people should try it).
Thanks,
Nat
Hi Nat,
could you be referring to side-by-side stereo in this (computer monitor)
use case?
http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/vmd/vmd-1.7.1/ug/node97.html
W.
On Fri, Mar 2, 2018 at 2:41 PM, nathanielclar5 .
wrote:
> To learn how to cross eyes, just hold you index fingers strait up, ~12-18
> inches
To learn how to cross eyes, just hold you index fingers strait up, ~12-18
inches from your eyes, and cross your eyes until the two fingers overlap to
form a third finger in the middle. Then practice holding your eyes there.
You can also practice with ceiling tiles, floor tiles, anything that
repea
You already have stereo built in, just turn on 'cross eyed stereo' and
learn to cross your eyes! It's brighter than any 3d monitor, requires no
hardware, and no, it won't hurt your eyes (even for hours at a time)
Nat
On Fri, Mar 2, 2018 at 11:01 AM, Jim Fairman wrote:
> Daniel,
>
> To best
Daniel,
To best of my knowledge, options for 3d stereo on Mac are limited to
Zalman:
https://strucbio.biologie.uni-konstanz.de/ccp4wiki/index.php/Zalman_Stereo
If you're willing to go to Linux or Windows, you can do an Nvidia Quadro
Card with a 120 or 144Hz monitor with a 3D Vision glasses kit.
I'm looking for some computer hardware advice.
I have a MacBook Pro with a "Retina" screen and
an Intel HD Graphics 4000 1536 MB graphics card,
running OS X 10.11.16 ("El Capitan"), and I would
like to view structures in 3-D in Coot.
Which computer monitors and which 3-D glasses brands
would allow