
To (hopefully) clarify... On 07/27/2014 10:42 PM, Kenward Vaughan wrote:
Hello all,
I apologize if this is skewed for the list; please correct me if so. ... with something like an Inspiron T5610, using an nVidia K4000 card.
I don't know if this card fits what is needed for sequential stereo. :(
I was thinking that the nVidia 3D vision system made sense, but honestly don't know if that would work with 10 different ones going at once. I am unfamiliar with other options.
Having read the Chimera documentation online, I don't know if the interleaved approach is ideal for people working together in a group ("This works well for a single viewer."). Is this still true with newer monitors (wider angles, etc.)? Since we have the money (big spillover from last year in a grant, and we need to spend it quickly) (tough situation, right??), I figured to go ahead with the sequential approach. But if not the nVidia system, what then? Of course, the passive glasses approach might still be best, as it seems that people couldn't move from screen to screen (seeing others work) without switching glasses. ??? Hate the idea of losing resolution though. The students may not recognize the difference, of course.
Would someone help me with this? There would be two or three students at each station, FWIW. Am I out in left field in my thinking?
Heh. Still feel out of the ballpark. Maybe the same city?? Kenward -- In a completely rational society, the best of us would aspire to be *teachers* and the rest of us would have to settle for something less, because passing civilization along from one generation to the next ought to be the highest honor and the highest responsibility anyone could have. - Lee Iacocca