On 01/17/2011 04:40 PM, Philip Heron wrote:
...
> I have neither
It could be interesting to find out if you can connect a 3D TV via HDMI
to a graphics card and get 3D working.
That would probably be the cheapest solution.
Mogens
--
Mogens Kjaer, m...@lemo.dk
http://www.lemo.dk
--
users mailin
On Mon, Jan 17, 2011 at 15:40:14 +,
Philip Heron wrote:
>
> I have neither -- what I'm trying to find out is if there's a preferred
> model, one that can be made to work in Fedora. I'm not going to buy one
> without knowing it works first :)
And it should also be clear if it works with the
On 17/01/2011 15:19, Mogens Kjaer wrote:
> On 01/17/2011 03:19 PM, Philip Heron wrote:
> ...
>> I've an ATI/AMD of some description, not at home now so I can't say. But
>> I'd change if necessary. Beyond that I have nothing.
>>
>> So they're dependent on using a particular graphics card?
>
> If yo
On 01/17/2011 03:19 PM, Philip Heron wrote:
...
> I've an ATI/AMD of some description, not at home now so I can't say. But
> I'd change if necessary. Beyond that I have nothing.
>
> So they're dependent on using a particular graphics card?
If you have the glasses but not the transmitter they would
On 17/01/2011 13:18, Mogens Kjaer wrote:
> On 01/17/2011 01:02 PM, Philip Heron wrote:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> Has anyone had any success with any of the various LCD shutter glasses
>> with Fedora? Specifically, I'm after a way to view stereo photographs.
>> Stereo video would be nice too.
>>
>> -Phil
>
On 01/17/2011 01:02 PM, Philip Heron wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Has anyone had any success with any of the various LCD shutter glasses
> with Fedora? Specifically, I'm after a way to view stereo photographs.
> Stereo video would be nice too.
>
> -Phil
What kind of graphics card do you have?
Do you have