Tag Archives: performance

DirectX 12 and Vulkan: what it is, and what it isn’t

I often read comments in the vein of: “… but vendor A’s hardware is designed more for DX12/Vulkan than vendor B’s”. It’s a bit more complicated than that, because it is somewhat of a chicken-and-egg problem. So I thought I’d … Continue reading

Posted in Direct3D, Hardware news, OpenGL, Software development, Software news, Vulkan | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 11 Comments

GeForce GTX1060: nVidia brings Pascal to the masses

Right, we can be short about the GTX1060… It does exactly what you’d expect: it scales down Pascal as we know it from the GTX1080 and GTX1070 to a smaller, cheaper chip, aiming at the mainstream market. The card is … Continue reading

Posted in Direct3D, Hardware news, OpenGL, Software development, Vulkan | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 21 Comments

AMD’s Polaris debuts in Radeon RX480: I told you so

In a recent blogpost, after dealing with the nasty antics of a deluded AMD fanboy, I already discussed what we should and should not expect from AMD’s upcoming Radeon RX480. Today, the NDA was lifted, and reviews appear everywhere on the … Continue reading

Posted in Hardware news | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 52 Comments

The damage that AMD marketing does

Some of you may have have seen the actions of a user that goes by the name of Redneckerz on a recent blogpost of mine. That guy posts one wall of text after the next, full of anti-nVidia rhetoric, shameless … Continue reading

Posted in Hardware news, Science or pseudoscience? | Tagged , , , , , | 25 Comments

nVidia’s GeForce GTX 1080, and the enigma that is DirectX 12

As you are probably aware by now, nVidia has released its new Pascal architecture, in the form of the GTX 1080, the ‘mainstream’ version of the architecture, codenamed GP104. nVidia had already presented the Tesla-varation of the high-end version earlier, … Continue reading

Posted in Direct3D, Hardware news, OpenGL | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 116 Comments

The myth of HBM

It’s amazing, but AMD has done it again… They have managed to trick their customer base into believing yet another bit of nonsense about AMD’s hardware. This time it is about HBM. As we all know, AMD has traded in … Continue reading

Posted in Hardware news | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 22 Comments

Test Drive’s pixelized transition effect

Today I want to talk about the transition effect in the game Test Drive from 1987. The effect will switch from one image to the next by replacing it pixel for pixel in a somewhat randomized pattern: I discussed this … Continue reading

Posted in Oldskool/retro programming, Software development | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

1991 donut – final release

No-XS has composed a special EdLib track for me to use in the 1991 donut, so I could finish it properly and release the final version: There are a number of small changes and tweaks, I will just quote the … Continue reading

Posted in Oldskool/retro programming, Software development | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Haswell Hasarrived

Intel has launched its new generation of Core i5/i7 processors, codenamed Haswell. If you are familiar with Intel’s tick-tock strategy, this is a ‘tock’: a microarchitecture update on existing process technology. In this case the 22 nm process which is … Continue reading

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OS and platform wars, why even bother anymore?

Unigine has recently released a new Valley benchmark, which runs on Windows, linux and OS X. The Windows version can run in either OpenGL or Direct3D. They have also released version 4.0 of their Heaven benchmark. I thought this, as … Continue reading

Posted in Direct3D, OpenGL, Software development, Software news | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 20 Comments