to how an LCD works for stereo.
Good luck,
James
============
James M. Vergis, Ph.D.
University of Virginia Molecular Physiology and Biological Physics
MKWEINR 438 Jordan Hall
1340 Jefferson Park Ave
Charlottesville, VA 22908-0736
phone:
.html. Mitsubishi
also sells 3D TVs... I'm not sure about other manufacturers.
James
========
James M. Vergis, Ph.D.
University of Virginia Molecular Physiology and Biological Physics
MKWEINR 438 Jordan Hall
1340 Jefferson Park Ave
Charlottesville, VA 22908-
Our lab recently purchased a Zeiss Discovery V.20 stereo microscope after
demoing an Olympus. We also own a Leica but we aren't happy with the sales
support (they can't keep a representative in our area) so Leica wasn't
considered.
In my opinion the optics between the Olympus and the
Zeiss ar
and it's definitely fast. I would get
the best multiple-core processor you can afford and maybe go a little slower
to save money so it's not completely cutting edge.
========
James M. Vergis, Ph.D.
University of Virginia Molecular Physiolo
I would also recommend the nanodrop. It takes a whole spectra every
measurement and there is no need to dilute your sample. You can demo it for
a week and try it out.
James M. Vergis, Ph.D.
University of Virginia Molecular Physiology and
status [lindex $pdbout 0]
if { $status } {
..."
(procedure "sketch_open_file" line 90)
invoked from within
"sketch_open_file sketch_PROJECT PDB"
invoked from within
".sketch.menu.file.m.read invoke active"
("uplevel" body line 1)
I came across an article about Samsung's $400 3D LCD monitor coming out in
April so I thought I'd pass it on for those who may be interested.
http://www.engadget.com/2009/01/07/samsung-officially-introduces-2233rz-the-22-inch-3d-panel-for-g/
I'm pretty sure their 3D implementation is different