There are 2 different approaches to 3D TV. In one camp you have Samsung, Panasonic, and Sony who use Active 3D technology for their TVs while LG, Vizio, and now Toshiba are in the Passive camp. Passive 3D is known to be flicker-free and uses glasses that are lighter and more comfortable.
Yes, Game Maker has some limited 3D functionality. Note that Game Maker was not intended for creating 3D games, so it is very hard to develop 3D games in Game Maker.
No, not at all. LG is the biggest maker of passive 3D TVs and LG Cinema 3D gives you the same 3D experience as the movie theater at home. The lightweight, battery free 3D glasses are polarized (just like those you get at movie theaters) and they give you images with hig quality that's also flicker free and crosstalk free.
blender 3d or Maya autodesk
3D Movie Maker A Movie maker By Microsoft
I assume you are talking about YoYo games game maker. For that, there is already 3D built into the pro version. You use the d3d functions to initialize and run 3D games.
These are $3999, very high-quality and they include 4 pairs of battery-free 3D glasses.
free software{fs},3d video maker
Yes, Pictometry offers multiple levels of high quality 3D models built from its imagery and a software package for users to create their own, less detailed 3D models.
They all work but only the 3D games are in 3D and everything else takes advantage of the High Quality Screen's capabilities to provide a better gaming monitor.
Please explain.
Yes. You can. Most 3D TVs are built with such a high specification that the 2D images you'll see on them are of exceptional quality. They're built that way because they need that high specification to deliver the best 3D imaging possible.
It's called GameMaker 3D at yoyogames.com