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I have a couple of 3D video games systems and one 3D Blu-ray player. My PlayStation 3D TV works fine for Blu-ray movies but does not work fine for my video games that are in 3D. There's too high of ping time on the PlayStation 3D TV at 31 milliseconds.
I'm trying to hook it up to a 1 millisecond monitor.
There are two ways I can hook it up either directly from the source to the monitor with a device called an X3D technologies 3D World 3D adapter. It's a VGA adapter that supposedly works with computers and other processors that convert 3D.
I know the pink time is quick enough on my Lenovo monitor where if I piped it through a video capture card I could play a game in real time without having to worry about the ping time of The PS3D TV.
The issue is I've got a 2023 Mac Mini M2 basic and the only device I have is a VGA dual connector which takes a VGA input and a VG output and has a 3D sinking hookup and a 3.5 mm for straight wired glasses like the Sega Scope glasses.
I assume bino could be either be put on a processor like a retropie or something like that and then could pass out a VGA connection and a sync connection and a 3.5 mm connection for the glasses. Or it could be used inside a computer that once it processes through the computer the computer could process out the VGA.
The problem is there's no way I could see as an average user on how to get Bino processed through my M2 Mac Mini. Because Bino 1.0 only goes to up to OS 10.10 and I have OS 15.2.
I assume the fat end of the device goes into the HDMI monitor and the thin end of the device comes from the source of the video. The reason why I say that is because my Mac can read that there is a VGA connection on my device and that it's hooked up to a monitor but has no idea what color profile to use nor does it have a name for the 3D adapter attached to it.
I tried writing your website email many times but never got a response I assume this is the correct way to get a response for help.
Is there's anything I know to help make an easier way to turn a normal low ping monitor into a 3D low ping monitor, let me know if there's a more direct device that works with HDMI input and output and if there is a cheaper processor then a $300 HD Fury from the HD Fury company.
By the way my monitor also has Display Port input so that could be used if necessary.
Also display port should work with variable frame rates and able to access 60, 120, and 144 Hz.
I got an infrared glasses syncher that hooks up through a some kind of weird three-prong hook-up and some PlayStation 3D goggles and I also got a Sega master system Sega Scope which could use the 3.5 mm end of that device.
Also I'm aware you have to break the polar shield that's on most TN monitors luckily I know how to do tate mode on my Macintosh. But because I can't get tate mode to work with my HDMI inputs directly I might have to go through my Macintosh anyway.
Luckily USB 3.0 hookups of HDMI input cards are considered to have ping of one millisecond or less. So all that would be good.
Just wondering if I could have some help with this.
If I have to operate on it using terminal mode let me know so I could call in a Mac terminal surgeon to help me.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
I have a couple of 3D video games systems and one 3D Blu-ray player. My PlayStation 3D TV works fine for Blu-ray movies but does not work fine for my video games that are in 3D. There's too high of ping time on the PlayStation 3D TV at 31 milliseconds.
I'm trying to hook it up to a 1 millisecond monitor.
There are two ways I can hook it up either directly from the source to the monitor with a device called an X3D technologies 3D World 3D adapter. It's a VGA adapter that supposedly works with computers and other processors that convert 3D.
I know the pink time is quick enough on my Lenovo monitor where if I piped it through a video capture card I could play a game in real time without having to worry about the ping time of The PS3D TV.
The issue is I've got a 2023 Mac Mini M2 basic and the only device I have is a VGA dual connector which takes a VGA input and a VG output and has a 3D sinking hookup and a 3.5 mm for straight wired glasses like the Sega Scope glasses.
I assume bino could be either be put on a processor like a retropie or something like that and then could pass out a VGA connection and a sync connection and a 3.5 mm connection for the glasses. Or it could be used inside a computer that once it processes through the computer the computer could process out the VGA.
The problem is there's no way I could see as an average user on how to get Bino processed through my M2 Mac Mini. Because Bino 1.0 only goes to up to OS 10.10 and I have OS 15.2.
I assume the fat end of the device goes into the HDMI monitor and the thin end of the device comes from the source of the video. The reason why I say that is because my Mac can read that there is a VGA connection on my device and that it's hooked up to a monitor but has no idea what color profile to use nor does it have a name for the 3D adapter attached to it.
I tried writing your website email many times but never got a response I assume this is the correct way to get a response for help.
Is there's anything I know to help make an easier way to turn a normal low ping monitor into a 3D low ping monitor, let me know if there's a more direct device that works with HDMI input and output and if there is a cheaper processor then a $300 HD Fury from the HD Fury company.
By the way my monitor also has Display Port input so that could be used if necessary.
Also display port should work with variable frame rates and able to access 60, 120, and 144 Hz.
I got an infrared glasses syncher that hooks up through a some kind of weird three-prong hook-up and some PlayStation 3D goggles and I also got a Sega master system Sega Scope which could use the 3.5 mm end of that device.
Also I'm aware you have to break the polar shield that's on most TN monitors luckily I know how to do tate mode on my Macintosh. But because I can't get tate mode to work with my HDMI inputs directly I might have to go through my Macintosh anyway.
Luckily USB 3.0 hookups of HDMI input cards are considered to have ping of one millisecond or less. So all that would be good.
Just wondering if I could have some help with this.
If I have to operate on it using terminal mode let me know so I could call in a Mac terminal surgeon to help me.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: