Ask anyone who has been using 3D stereo for gaming and they will tell you that while it may be one of the least known gaming technologies, its the coolest out there. I would have to agree with them! If you dont know what 3D Stereo (or stereoscopy) is, start off by reading the wiki page on it.
NVIDIA has been active with 3D stereo gaming for about eight years, working on software for our GPUs and with game developers to ensure games have stereo capable effects built in.
Recently, we've been working on support for new displays coming out and you may have seen information on our demonstrations on the Wired Blog or BBC Tech blog.
Zalman also recently announced two new monitors, called TriMon, which are availalble as a 19" 1280x1025 and 22" 1680x1050. Both of these monitors are available now and work with NVIDIA GeForce 7 series of higher GPUs to enable 3D stereo on some of the latest games, such as Call of Duty 4, Crysis, and Age of Empires 3.
If you want to get a 3D stereo gaming setup for yourserlf, read more about NVIDIA 3D Stereo support for gamers. Or if you are a developer, download 3D stereo game development guidelines to ensure your game works great with 3D stereo.

nice post mate.....
software
Posted by: kate | October 29, 2009 at 07:58 AM
Stereoscopy.......
I haven't heard about this before
Posted by: Miracle studios -- web design company | June 13, 2008 at 04:54 AM
Does anyone know how Creative Labs X-fi works on SLI boards
Posted by: MikelJoe | May 25, 2008 at 06:50 AM
Ditto, I've been scouring the net looking for hard info on Stereo 3D SLI performance differences, compared to just going with one beefy vid card. A card for each eye. Anyone tried it?
Posted by: Joe | May 18, 2008 at 12:10 AM
Hey, could you comment on how stereo3d works with SLI? Do you get performance benefits from SLI in stereo3d at all (on vista 32-bit and the latest stereo driver)?
Posted by: cybereality | April 26, 2008 at 03:29 AM