This is a read-only mirror of pymolwiki.org

Difference between revisions of "Stereo 3D Display Options"

From PyMOL Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 5: Line 5:
 
== Categories ==
 
== Categories ==
  
* "Active Stereo 3D" requires expensive and/or bulky shutter glasses.  For decades, this has been the standard solution for stereo 3D molecular visualization on the desktop
+
* "Active Stereo 3D" requires expensive and/or bulky shutter glasses.  For decades, this has been the standard solution for stereo 3D molecular visualization on the desktop.
* "Passive Stereo 3D" requires inexpensive lightweight polarized glasses required.  This has emerged as the standard solution for delivering stereo 3D to   audiences which consist of more than a few people.
+
* "Passive Stereo 3D" requires inexpensive lightweight polarized glasses required.  This has emerged as the standard solution for delivering stereo 3D to audiences of more than a few people.
* "Autostereoscopic 3D" means that no glasses are required.  However, current autostereoscopic displays tend not to work well for molecular graphics due to their inability to faithfully represent fine detail such as thin bonds and wire meshes.
+
* "Autostereoscopic 3D" means that no glasses are required.  However, current autostereoscopic displays tend do not to work well for molecular graphics due to their inability to faithfully represent fine detail such as thin bonds and wire meshes.
  
 
== Active Stereo 3D (High-Refresh) Displays ==
 
== Active Stereo 3D (High-Refresh) Displays ==

Revision as of 16:25, 18 September 2008

This page is for aggregating the latest know-how and links to current Stereo 3D display options best suited for molecular graphics applications like PyMOL. Please strive to provide objective factual information based on first-hand experiences while using the displays for real work and teaching.

Let's figure out together what stereo solutions work well in this brave new post-CRT world!

Categories

  • "Active Stereo 3D" requires expensive and/or bulky shutter glasses. For decades, this has been the standard solution for stereo 3D molecular visualization on the desktop.
  • "Passive Stereo 3D" requires inexpensive lightweight polarized glasses required. This has emerged as the standard solution for delivering stereo 3D to audiences of more than a few people.
  • "Autostereoscopic 3D" means that no glasses are required. However, current autostereoscopic displays tend do not to work well for molecular graphics due to their inability to faithfully represent fine detail such as thin bonds and wire meshes.

Active Stereo 3D (High-Refresh) Displays

This solution would be analogous to using desktop CRT monitors with shutter glasses.

LCD Displays

Are any of these displays on the market yet?

DLP Projection Televisions

Projection televisions tend to be too large and blurry for desktop use.

Passive Stereo 3D Displays

Mirror-based Multi-LCD Solutions

One Piece Multi-layer LCD Displays

Autostereoscopic LCD Displays

Active Stereo 3D (High Refresh) Projectors

Although these displays require shutter glasses out of the box, when combined with the adapters below and a special "silvered" screen, they can be used to project Passive Stereo 3D to a large audience.

DLP Projectors

Passive Stereo 3D Adaptor Hardware for Active Stereo 3D Projectors

These devices make it possible for a large audience to see projected stereo 3D using inexpensive polarized glasses.