
From the links you provide, Chimera should work just as well as the other applications. According to the Chimera documentation, you would use the "row stereo, right eye even" camera mode to get the Zalman stereo style. That said, you might be able to do better. The S3D has active shutter glasses, so in theory, it should be able to fullscreen left and right eye views, Chimera's sequential stereo, unlike the Zalman mode where you lose half the vertical resolution. Our experience with the NVIDIA 3D Vision and the Quadro drivers (the S3D has a GeForce driver) tells us that there are two different places to configure stereo in the driver, and for OpenGL applications, like Chimera, you need to turn on stereo in the 3D Settings section, not the Stereoscopic section (or on in both). Please let us know if you can get sequential stereo to work. And in case anyone is reading this for other systems with NVIDIA GeForce and 3D Vision setups, I would only expect the OpenGL stereo to work with Windows 8 or newer, as is the case with AMD Radeons and 3D TVs. But we haven't tested it the NVIDIA solution, so we don't know for sure. HTH, Greg On 03/25/2014 07:01 PM, Dougherty, Matthew T wrote:
I have a toshiba qosmio x875-7390 S3D laptop, which is based on the NVidia NVision 3D.
Toshiba structured the device to be user unfriendly, limiting stereo3D for bluray and youtube 3d via adobe flash.
coming across a pymol S3D post I see there is a workaround, for a different Toshiba model.
http://nanonan.wordpress.com/2012/03/28/pymol-and-coot-3d-stereo-on-qosmio-f... http://coxcoppes.nl/3DScreenActivator/index.php?pagina=1
Any comments about chimera using S3D on NVidia NVision 3D?
Matthew Dougherty National Center for Macromolecular Imaging Baylor College of Medicine