If you have a device capable of displaying 3D video, and you’ve been hurting for a place to put it to good use, look no further than YouTube. YouTube and Nvidia have partnered to start posting and hosting 3D videos that can be viewed on any 3D capable device, like the Nintendo 3DS, the T-Mobile G-Slate 3D, the LG Optimus 3D, and others.
Of course, in order to view 3D videos, you’ll need the right browser, the right graphics hardware, and a pair of 3D glasses, all of which Nvidia is more than happy to provide you with if you’re interested. For example, if you want to watch the 3D videos on your desktop computer, if you’re not already 3D-equipped you’ll have to buy an Nvidia GeForce GPU, a 3D Vision capable monitor or projector, 3D Vision glasses, and a 3D Vision IR emitter. You’ll also have to use Firefox 4 or higher, and have up-to-date Nvidia graphics drivers.
If that seems like a lot of gear just to watch 3D videos on YouTube, you’d be absolutely correct. Nvidia makes the case that more and more 3D video is making its way on the Web, and if you want to watch any of it, you’ll need the right equipment. 3D video and 3D devices aren’t just a passing fad, they say. Plus, even if you don’t always use the 3D gear, if you have an Nvidia GPU in your system and the equipment on standby, you can enjoy it when you want it.
Most analysts have already said that 3D TV and Blu-Ray will probably stick around, even if they turn into “checkbox” features that no manufacturer would come to market without. The jury is still out on whether the 3D trend will carry to PCs and stick, especially since there aren’t terribly many major supporters of the technology aside from Nvidia. YouTube, for its part, knows it has the capability to stream 3D videos, and is likely looking at it as a way to offer streaming video to even more customers on more devices, nothing more.
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