Nvidia is quietly becoming the company driving the initial and most progressive 3D experiences for videogaming and PCs.
In Taipei near Computex 2010 this week, Nvidia CEO Jen-Hsun Huang told an audience, “This is the beginning of the 3D PC revolution. It’s been 10 years since there’s been a revolutionary change in gaming graphics,” according to TG Daily.
The Santa Clara, Ca.-based company has recently been aligning with powerful players on all sides of the media such Panasonic (video) to promote playback of videogames on 3D TV displays, with Comcast and the PGA to provide live 3D streaming of the Masters Golf Tournament, and now an alignment with Microsoft’s Silverlight and Adobe to support 3D web streaming to PCs equipped with Nvidia 3D Vision, and with PC makers such as Asus which announced new two new 3D PCs at Computex this week– the GS1JX-EE notebook, and the all-in-one EeeTop PC (Acer, Dell, LG, Toshiba, and others also have 3D PCs with required 120Hz certified display, active shutter glasses and pre-installed drivers, which can be connected to a 3D TV via HDMI 1.4, starting at about $1,500), all to deliver 3D games, Blu-ray movies, photographs and more through Nvidia’s 3D Vision software (a $199 kit), as explained recently to 3DHollywood.net by Nvidia’s vp corporate marketing Rob Csongor in the following video: