The new market for 3D accelerators and 3D acceleration features has spawned a large crop of 3D video cards with varying capabilities. There are several different approaches that are taken to providing a system with 3D capabilities. While the available cards and technologies are changing rapidly, you will generally find that the cards on the market break out as follows:
* 2D Only (Conventional) Cards: These are regular video cards that do not incorporate any special 3D acceleration functions. Usually these are either older cards, or newer cards that are optimized for 2D performance. When using a card of this type, it is necessary to pair it with a 3D card to obtain 3D acceleration functions.
* Dedicated 3D Cards: These are accelerators that are designed only for 3D hardware functions. Since they do not do conventional 2D acceleration, they need to work with a 2D card in most cases to deliver good 2D+3D performance. Most of the higher-quality 3D cards are of this variety. They typically use a feature connector to connect directly to the 2D card. This lets the 3D card perform its acceleration functions to provide a video stream without requiring its own RAMDAC or bus control logic. This is generally the best solution for high-end graphics but it incurs the cost of two video cards.
* Combination 2D+3D Cards: In an effort to tackle the cost problem of using an additional, separate card for 3D acceleration, many companies are developing cards that perform both 2D and 3D functions. For many users, this is a good, cost-effective compromise. Most of these cards provide from moderate to good 2D performance, and support for some to most of the 3D acceleration features. However, like most compromises, these cards typically don't provide the level of performance or feature support that dedicated 3D cards do. It is important to research these cards well, since many of them support only a small subset of the 3D acceleration features found on 3D cards.
No. What is required is a 3d capable video card, a monitor with a refresh rate of 120Hz or greater and the 3D glasses for your video card.
A proper video card is required.
Update your video card drivers and make sure that your video card supports Direct 3D if not then you're going to need to update the card itself.
A video card is the component that generates a feed of output images to a display. Most video cards allow for the rendering of both 2D images and 3D images.
You need to buy a better video card. There isn't much else you can do.
ya gaming computers are good for video editing but u also need 3d accelerator card.
you can find a 256mb video card for around 20-30$
You don't need different hardware, however, different hardware improves performance and is recommended. Many computers can run basic 3d applications without a video card (Without the different hardware). A video card is useful because 3d graphics is very, very heavy on the CPU (The processor inside the computer). The GPU (The processor inside the Video Card) is dedicated for 3d, while the CPU is a general-purpose processor, this means that the GPU can handle 3D much more easily than the CPU. Suppose you are playing a video game: The CPU has to handle numerous calculations, in order to reduce the CPU load, the 3D is handled by the GPU, while the CPU handles everything else.
Yes it will
only if you have a 3D T.V. or a 3d video game with 3d glasses.
I would suggest checking your video card, but have a professional do it, as those things are expensive, obviously. Chances are, if the video card is at fault, or even if it isn't, the pros can fix it, maybe at a discount price too!
You have to beat Flipside's Pit of 100 Trial twice to get a Mario card, which allows you to have unlimited 3D.