Anyone using more than 2 monitors
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I have a Sony W900 series TV and it is great
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@Mike-Ralston said:
@scottalanmiller Really? I'm not a fan of their mainstream products, they're terrible. But the ones they actually put effort into, those turn out VERY well. Their TV's and handheld consoles are wonderful and reliable pieces of hardware. So far I've not found a peripheral that they've had a hand in that's bad.
It may be personal experience. I've always managed to wear out their products eerily early. The only exception was a refurb Trinitron monitor that I picked up in 2000. Stupid thing never died, and i wound up replacing it in 2007.
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Yup, I've never had good luck with their stuff except for a 1997 Trinitron that, I think, is still going somewhere.
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I'm not sure that VR will ever really take off in gaming. The immersive environment is to distracting, to life like. At least this is what professional players say for competitive gaming.
But I guess time will tell.
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Seems like lifelike is what we would want if it was done well.
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@Dashrender said:
At least this is what professional players say for competitive gaming.
Yes, the "pro competitive gamers" means FPS and their goal is to get points, not to enjoy the game. If the goal is to win, you give up fun and quality experience to get the edge. If the goal is an awesome game experience, the priorities change.
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@scottalanmiller said:
Seems like lifelike is what we would want if it was done well.
In a fun situation, sure - but definitely not in a competitive one. The more life like, the more in shape you'll have to be to compete because your body will be reacting to the situation a lot more than the 'flat' view of the gaming world most of us currently enjoy.
Now - from a fitness perspective it could be awesome. I see it now - Join our gym so you can gain the stamina needed to kill your opponents in XYZ game!
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As a hardcore gamer (not quite pro), if it's too immersive, it's difficult to play in extreme situations. VR would be a nightmare. On the plus side, it would reduce the obesity rate amongst gamers.
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@technobabble said:
@don91 Was the 6 two rows of three stacked and the 9 three rows of three stacked?
yes on the first but ive also had other configs too. and the 9 was all over the place.
i dont have any available picture of the large volume setups but....
http://imgur.com/lZSQzjG
http://imgur.com/gNEMeL0 (my favorite setup)
http://imgur.com/5lSRCEC
http://imgur.com/UDNZdtE
http://imgur.com/oJqWi5Q (dual workstation setup left was me right was my brother)
http://imgur.com/iH8ea1z ("spartan" setup when i had moved into my second apartment back in the day) -
@Mike-Ralston said:
For gaming, 16:9 or 16:10 are really optimal. I think it may be good for Flight Simulators or such, but for RTS, FPS, any sort of Racing, and anything competitive, it would make it harder to keep track of everything. I've had a bit of hands-on experience with 3 monitor and 5 monitor setups for gaming, and the other monitors just subtract from the immersion and make it harder to pay attention to what's in front of you. Surround sound headphones is a much more viable and reliable solution for telling what's going on around you.
i love my eyefinity setup for gamign: batman, dirt3, fable3, lots of fps's (metro,bioshock)
this statement is really outdated. eventually you get used to it..i find it easy to keep track of everything the trick is making your fov perfect you dont want to have to turn you head too much just keep stuff int he corner of your eye. the most common mistake with large format monitors or eyefinity setups is sitting too close.
sources ? ....see my last post. -
@technobabble said:
I would like wrap around racing simulator game that allows you to see the inside of the cockpit like in Pro Race Driver
there are several though my favorite was dirt3
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@don91 cool!
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@alexntg said:
As a hardcore gamer (not quite pro), if it's too immersive, it's difficult to play in extreme situations. VR would be a nightmare. On the plus side, it would reduce the obesity rate amongst gamers.
As a "Pro" gamer, I find things that are extremely immersive very distracting. However, if I was going to sit back and enjoy some Skyrim or something along those lines, VR is awesome. Thinking about going with a 2560 x 1440 full 3D setup, and just disabling all the fancy frills for competitive gaming.
@don91 said:
@Mike-Ralston said:
For gaming, 16:9 or 16:10 are really optimal. I think it may be good for Flight Simulators or such, but for RTS, FPS, any sort of Racing, and anything competitive, it would make it harder to keep track of everything. I've had a bit of hands-on experience with 3 monitor and 5 monitor setups for gaming, and the other monitors just subtract from the immersion and make it harder to pay attention to what's in front of you. Surround sound headphones is a much more viable and reliable solution for telling what's going on around you.
i love my eyefinity setup for gamign: batman, dirt3, fable3, lots of fps's (metro,bioshock)
this statement is really outdated. eventually you get used to it..i find it easy to keep track of everything the trick is making your fov perfect you dont want to have to turn you head too much just keep stuff int he corner of your eye. the most common mistake with large format monitors or eyefinity setups is sitting too close.
sources ? ....see my last post.As far as just enjoying yourself in a single-player game, I wholeheartedly agree. But as soon as you throw Multiplayer in there, where the amount of "Fun" that is had is more reliant on skill, VR, EyeFinity, and 3D Surround just become distracting.
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@Nic said:
Too many monitors and you don't notice stuff anymore. More than two and it's too far in my peripheral vision.
Pfft! Lightweight. Learn to manage it, or get better eyes!
Have had 2 x 24" for years. Added a couple 19" for ancillary task monitoring. Synergy is helpful to switch back/forth on one of the 19", as needed. Typically have 2-3 computers for various things (physical or RDC), as well.
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I used to work on lots of big monitors. Now I'm mostly on the iPhone. Lol
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