Entire 3D Vision Ecosystem on Display in NVIDIA Booth, Including World's Only Consumer 3D Multi-Display Solution Running on NVIDIA GeForce GPUs and the First Sneak Peek of YouTube 3D
LAS VEGAS, NV--(Marketwire - January 6, 2010) - 2010 INTERNATIONAL CONSUMER ELECTRONICS
SHOW (South Hall 4 - Booth #35912) -- It's clear that 2010 is poised to
be the year of 3D and NVIDIA is leading the charge to bring 3D to the
computing masses. At this year's CES show in Las Vegas, NVIDIA is
showcasing a host of new products and technologies that show how PCs based
on GeForce® GPUs along with the NVIDIA 3D Vision™ hardware and
software ecosystem are the platforms best suited to make 3D pervasive for
all PC entertainment, including Blu-ray 3D movies, games, photos, and even
the Web.
On display in the booth, NVIDIA is demonstrating 3D Vision technology
running on:
Desktop PCs using new 3D Vision-Ready, 1080p, 120Hz LCD panels from
leading display companies, including Acer, Alienware, and others.
New 3D-Vision-ready notebooks from leading notebook manufacturers, all
equipped with new state-of-the-art 120Hz 3D capable displays.
NVIDIA 3D Vision Surround, the world's first consumer, multi-display 3D
solution which allows users to span 3D content across 3 high definition
monitors or projectors for a truly breathtaking and immersive gaming
experience! NVIDIA 3D Vision Surround does for 3D PC gaming just like what
IMAX® 3D does for movies.
In addition to the great 3D hardware, there is also a ton of cool,
compelling content on display, all viewed in 3D when used with the 3D
Vision active-shutter glasses. Of note:
New Blu-ray 3D software players, including Arsoft's TotalMedia Theatre
3 and Cyberlink's PowerDVD Ultra
Blu-ray 3D content, including 3D movie trailers for Disney's "Toy Story
3," "A Christmas Carol," "Alice in Wonderland," and more.
The hottest PC games running in full 1080p stereoscopic 3D, including
James Cameron's Avatar: The Game, Batman: Arkham Asylum, Dark Void, Just
Cause 2, Need for Speed: Shift, and more.
Plus,
The world's first sneak peek of YouTube 3D, running on a 3D technology
demonstration version of the Adobe® Flash® Player software that is
viewable with NVIDIA 3D Vision glasses in full color.