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Steve Ludtke reports what his lab is using for hardware stereo. Tom ------- Start of forwarded message ------- Date: Mon, 6 Jun 2005 12:59:39 -0500 (CDT) From: Steve Ludtke <stevel@blake.3dem.bioch.bcm.tmc.edu> Reply-To: sludtke@bcm.tmc.edu To: Thomas Goddard <goddard@cgl.ucsf.edu> Subject: Re: Chimera Suggestion We have the Sharp 15" one. As I said, it works ok as long as you stay in the sweet spot, but gives me a nasty headache (which the glasses do not). We haven't tried any of the high-refresh LCD's yet. We still use CRT's for that at the moment. We're about to try a homebrew polarized glasses solution. We do actually have a (800x600) high refresh projector for use with the shutter glasses which works well. - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Steven Ludtke, PhD | Baylor College of Medicine sludtke@bcm.tmc.edu | Asst. Professor & Co-Director stevel@alumni.caltech.edu | National Center For Macromolecular Imaging V: (713)798-9020 | Dept of Biochemistry and Mol. Biol. F: (713)798-1625 | instant messenger: sludtke42 | Those who Do, Are http://ncmi.bcm.tmc.edu/~stevel | The converse also applies On Mon, 6 Jun 2005, Thomas Goddard wrote:
Hi Steve,
Our stereo monitor that requires no glasses was a 20" flat panel type display from Opticality (formerly X3D). I just found out we have returned it because it worked so poorly. I'd be curious what make/model you have. Also have you tried any normal flat panels with fast refresh rates and LCD glasses?
Tom
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Thomas Goddard