Vincent Bourdier wrote:
2008/11/20 Paul Melis <[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>>
lucas Grijander wrote:
you are right, but I have polarized glasses that go together
with the polarized lenses of the projectors. I think we can
have much better quality like that.
You might be surprised. Depending on the polarization type and
filter quality there can be a lot of ghosting in the images. You
also need a good alignment on your projectors.
Of course, the calibration and the settings of the material will be a
little complicated at the beginning. But With this material, active
stereo is possible, and this will render very well.
Without 2 graphic output on your graphic card, I would be very
difficult to set an active stereo I think... maybe with special
synchronisation to allow the projectors to get the output each one
after the other ? I don't know...
By the way, this seems to be good material, have fun :-)
As the OP already seems to have projectors and polarization filters and
such it would be easiest to just find a PC with 2 outputs and drive the
projectors directly, as Robert suggested.
In case he does: remember to use a projection surface that doesn't
destroy the polarization ;-)
But polarized glasses are a lot more convenient to wear than those
bloody shutter glasses.
:D
Yesterday I showed a group of students anaglyphic pictures after giving
them the red-blue glasses. Quite funny to see a classroom full of those
things :)
And even those are still more fashionable than crystaleyes...
P
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