Rabu, 16 April 2014

Can a 3d Blu ray movie be played from a computer on to a 3d TV (Passive technology)?

Q. Hi,
I have an LG passive 3D TV 250hz. I have my gaming computer beside it, so I figured why not hook it up to the TV. Then that got me thinking, can I play 3D Blu ray movies from my computer on to the TV? Or is 3D capability limited to 3D Blu ray players only? Thank you for your time.

A. You can play a Blu Ray movie on your computer if your computer has a Blu Ray drive, they are putting them in the newer computers now if you request it.

If you don't have a Blu Ray drive on your computer then you can't play it on your computer.

Once you establish that issue there is no reason why you can't stream it to your tv if you have it set up correctly. However to receive a 3D picture your tv has to have that capability which is relatively new technology on tvs.

I have a Blu Ray drive on my computer and I stream to my tv using apple tv.


How do I get my 3D tv to render video games in 3D?
Q. I've been at it almost 2 days and nothing is working, even the companies own tech support has failed me. Even if you don't know what steps to take, perhaps there's a website that might? Any help would be much appreciated.
Forgot to mention I'm trying to play games off my computer, not a gaming console.

A. You didn't give your age or your experience with 3D or any indication that you know how 3D works. So, I have to risk insulting your intelligence by asking you some obvious questions:

Does the game console support 3D sterescopic output and does the game software support 3D stereoscopic output? All links in the chain must support 3D otherwise it won't work, from the game, to the console, to the TV. I'm assuming you're using HDMI cables to connect... correct?

Also, it helps a lot for troubleshooting if you tell us what you've already tried.

There are different 3D technologies. One uses special battery-powered glasses to close each eye alternatively 30 times per second, so that only one eye sees the screen at any given time and the correct image is shown on TV for that eye. Another technology shows both images on the TV at the same time, but they are polarized at 90 degree angles to each other. You need polarized glasses for this to work, but they don't need batteries. They're usually cheapo glasses with fixed lenses, like the kind you get in the movie theater when you saw The Abyss.

You have to make sure that all links in your 3D system use are using the same technology otherwise it won't work.

EDIT: Does your computer support 3d stereoscopic output? All graphics cards can do 3d rendering, but sterescopic is different. It creates two seperates images at the same time, one for each eye. You need a special graphics card for this. Most graphics cards can't do it.





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