Domain: edimensional.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to edimensional.com.
Comments · 12
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controler for you
hear i have linked it. it works for pc ps3 and xbox 360. http://www.edimensional.com/product_info.php?cPath=24&products_id=143
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Re:I whish my brother good luck
Maybe by using an alternative controller? There is for example the Xbox360 Access Controller
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Re:I am disabled too.
Try their homepage here: http://www.edimensional.com It should be the first thing listed under 'game controllers'.
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Re:I am disabled too.
Have you seen BenHeck's new controllers? Even though there's five modules, you probably would only have to use four at once (at most) since the d-pad isn't used at the same time as the analog sticks in nearly every game.
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Only a few months late
Benheck already designed one, and you can buy your own. Even works with the PS2 and PS3.
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Problems with gamingThese types of glasses have been around for a long time now. But the main sticking points with games remain:
- You get half the FPS (each frame needs to be rendered once for each eye)
- Motion sickness is often a problem
- Games can appear blurred
- Edges of screen cannot be rendered properly in 3D (you get images only one eye can see)
- Only 3D aspects of games are supported. Dialog boxes, text, HUDs all will not work properly unless they are drawn as part of the 3D model (which they usually never are)
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Or you could..
Get those crazy blue/red glasses like they used for Friday the 13th and Nightmare on Elm Street! There's just something about hard plastic cutting into your nose to really make you feel the axe chopping and finger slicing goodness. Or shell out of one of these: http://www.edimensional.com/product_info.php?cPat
h =21&products_id=28 for use in your home instead. -
Re:Urp...Nowadays, for the polarization method, they are using a special two-lense camera that puts both views, compressed, onto one piece of film. Then, there is a special two-section prismatic lens on the projector that re-expands the two images and superimposes them on the screen. Each piece of the prism has the correct polarization so the resulting image is ready for the glasses.
Regarding the original claim, making 2D DVDs into 3D, e-Dimensional has software that claims to do this already; you have to use their LCD flicker-glasses and watch it on your PC, though. I've tried the glasses and the flicker is not too bad on the PC because of the higher refresh rates. But on a standard TV, you may have seizures from the low-refresh flicker.
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Re:The difference
>> CRT's are a thing of the past now.
A thing of the past? Likley, not! What happens if I need the physical refresh rate that a CRT provides?
If I want to use my E-Dimensional glasses, I can't go and use LCD/TFT/Flat Screens because they lack a refresh rate, which is what these glasses work off of.
CRT will never bite the dust until someone gets these type of things to work from a LCD/TFT/Flat screen monitor, which currently isn't going to happen.
NeoThermic -
Got my Christmas Gifts on order!
After a suprise christmas bonus; I've just ordered these little toys to play with:
eDimensional 3D glasses and a TrackIR2 -
Re:Am I missing Something?
There are already glasses that use stereoscopic images - such as the eDimensional 3D glasses.
There's shutters on the glasses that show/hide each eye alternately, while drawing the appropriate image on-screen. Unfortunately, that means to play your beautiful directx games at 100hz, you'll need a 200hz monitor (er, do these exist?) and a monster pc... They're well cool though...
AFAIK they're compatible with geforces, radeons, and some other graphics cards. -
3d gibs
i think i'd rather play a fps in 3d.