Benjamin Smith
October 1st, 2010, 04:58 AM
Folks
I've been impressed with what I've seen in the videos at this link:-
Premiere Pro CS5 Stereoscopic 3D Video Editing with Dave Helmley - 3D Vision Blog (http://3dvision-blog.com/premiere-pro-cs5-stereoscopic-3d-video-editing-with-dave-helmley/)
The videos are really long and boring, but the nuts and bolts is that with Cineform Neo and CS5 he's got a dual monitor setup where you can see live 3D on a second monitor while editing. This is what we call "the holy grail".
However, I have no clue what kind of graphics card you need to do this. I guess it's dual output, but does it have to be a fancy one like a Quadro? My 3D sync emitter needs a signal it gets from a 3 pin mini DIN connector. If I switch to the nVidia 3D Vision glasses and emitter how does that get its sync?
Any help, as always, greatfully received...
/ben
I've been impressed with what I've seen in the videos at this link:-
Premiere Pro CS5 Stereoscopic 3D Video Editing with Dave Helmley - 3D Vision Blog (http://3dvision-blog.com/premiere-pro-cs5-stereoscopic-3d-video-editing-with-dave-helmley/)
The videos are really long and boring, but the nuts and bolts is that with Cineform Neo and CS5 he's got a dual monitor setup where you can see live 3D on a second monitor while editing. This is what we call "the holy grail".
However, I have no clue what kind of graphics card you need to do this. I guess it's dual output, but does it have to be a fancy one like a Quadro? My 3D sync emitter needs a signal it gets from a 3 pin mini DIN connector. If I switch to the nVidia 3D Vision glasses and emitter how does that get its sync?
Any help, as always, greatfully received...
/ben