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The new NVIDIA 3D Vision Wireless Glasses Kit is priced at $149, a $50 cut from the original price, despite offering 50-percent more battery runtime.
The improved battery life and reduced price make the NVIDIA 3D Vision glasses a more attractive option for those looking to enhance their 3D viewing experience.
NVIDIA followed up with second-generation 3D Vision glasses in 2011, making them cheaper and extending battery life. However the snowball of 3D into a must-have technology failed to materialize.
A recent Nvidia patent filing fueled speculation about upcoming smart glasses, although the chipmaker hasn't made any announcements about future products in that space. But Nvidia's new models and ...
Nvidia introduces GeForce 3D Vision, stereoscopic 3D glasses you might actually use.
NVIDIA has just lifted the lid on its new lineup of seven Fermi-based GeForce GT and GTX 400M mobile GPUs, revamping the entire mid to high-end range.
The GeForce 3D Vision glasses use battery-powered, active stereoscopic technology to create its 3D effect at 60 FPS--different from ATI's passive iZ3D pair.
Above: Nvidia’s 3D Vision slick shades are a far cry from its kitschy cardboard predecessors of yesteryear. But is it worth it? The 3D Vision kit uses stereoscopic 3D technology.
Find out how Nvidia is going to change how you experience 3D gaming with the GeForce 3D Vision.
Nvidia, Stanford U propose thin and light holographic glasses Novel components such as a spatial phase modulator, and a novel machine learning algorithm, reduce the bulk of existing approaches.
Additionally, Nvidia has reduced the kit's price by $50 to $149, and the price of an extra set of glasses has been lowered to $119.
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