Slashdot Mirror


OpenGL 2.0 White Papers

Timothy J. Wood writes "3DLabs has posted a series of white papers on OpenGL 2.0 covering topics such as improving parallelism, timing control, minimizing data movement programmable pixel pack and unpack and (most notably) a proposal for a hardware independent shading language."

8 of 129 comments (clear)

  1. Shading Language by bribecka · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's about time they get a programmable shading language in OpenGL--that is the most lacking feature in my opinion. Probably 90% of the textures used in things like games could be eliminated and replaced with much higher quality shaders that not only get rid of the repeatability of textures, but also *gain* detail as the distance decreases.

    Can't wait! Hopefully they'll base it on something already well established, ie. Renderman SL.

    --

    Where are we going and why am I in this handbasket?

  2. Way too late. by Otis_INF · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Microsoft, allthough they're a member of the ARB, has > 90% of the desktop market, and is moving forward with a rapid speed towards the heavy workstation market. With this situation comes the fact that DirectX is THE platform to target when it comes to 3D accelerated code.

    What's another issue is that Microsoft, up till now, has refused to distribute an updated opengl32.dll with their Operating Systems. The current version is the old OpenGL v1.1 compatible version. SGI has said it has distributed a v1.2 version to Microsoft, but for whatever reason, it's not distributed further to the clients. This widens the gap between a non-uniform OpenGL platform still on v1.1, forcing you to use non-standard stuff like vendor-specific extensions and vendor specific opengl loading on one side and the DirectX API on the other. Without Microsoft's help, OpenGL will never be in the front seat again on Windows systems and because they're gaining a lot of marketshare in the workstation market, also not in that typical OpenGL area.

    --
    Never underestimate the relief of true separation of Religion and State.
    1. Re:Way too late. by praedor · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Hrmmm. Apple is up and coming (again) with its nice PPCs and MacOS X (UNIX!). This and the fact that even MacOS 9 doesn't use Direct X means that software that goes out there for Macs and PCs, and seeks to stick with the growing (again) Apple market will have to stick with OpenGL. Mac doesn't do DirectX (thank GAWD!).


      Many still do lots of graphics stuff on Macs, this means OpenGL. Games on Macs will have to be OpenGL.


      Fortunately, since there is but a relatively minor difference between MacOS X and Linux/*BSD, support for Macs means easier time getting support for Linux/*BSD in this area. DirectX is not and has not killed OpenGL. It cannot.

      --
      In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
  3. In a nutshell: OpenGL2 good; "Pure" OpenGL bad by arQon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Honestly, the only really annoying thing about working with OpenGL lately is the headaches that come from pixel/vertex shaders. We certainly need a vendor-independent way to support those, because damned if I'm going to rewrite mine for ATI cards - they'll simply be treated as "not supporting vertex programs".

    The synchronisation stuff is pretty handy: certainly, NV_fence has been very useful over the past year or so, and again: vendor-specific paths BAD. :)

    Some of the changes seem to be as much to persuade some-ignorant developers to use OpenGL over D3D - the "black box" aspects of OpenGL are one the more DESIRABLE things about it. Changing those because some D3D guy is saying "I do xyz in D3D and I want the exact same concept to work well in GL because I'm too thick to actually use the right approach for that renderer" seems simply wrong to me.

    Uh-oh: UPS just kicked in. Yay mountain storms...

    "Pure" OpenGL2 is a terrible mistake. Give vendors the option NOT to support something, and they won't. Then all your old apps+games are up shit creek.

    Will finish later when I have stable power again...

  4. The future of OpenGL article by codexus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Here's a very nice article about the future of OpenGL. It might be easier to read than the full OpenGL 2.0 white papers.

    --
    True warriors use the Klingon Google
  5. Humm... by GISboy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Some of the propisitions are good, but I fail to see how it will help.

    Let me explain, and ignore the hardware issues to some extent:
    Looking back at a summary of 3d api's:
    Glide: Wickedly fast , easy to write for, obsessivly propritary (IIRC) a la 3dfx.

    OpenGL: Fast (glide speed on compliant/correct hardware), moderatly hard to write for initially but easier as time goes by. Open/closed? I honestly forget. Was it documented API's and closed source?

    DirectX: Humm. Used to be "Dog ass slow". Moderatly fast, maybe medium speed, very compatible, used to be (maybe still is) hard as hell to write for (this may have changed).
    Eventually, If memory recalls correctly, absorbed the "better aspects" of other 3d api's, but also added another degree of difficulty/confusion to implementation.

    Now, realize I base this off of my: gaming, memory (oops) and discussion of merits I've read/heard/been privy to.

    I'll focus on gaming because that is where the rubber meets the road (or where the 'trons hit the tube).

    OpenGL: Quake/GLquake (...or was it GLquack? heh)
    Even the "software" mode went from Impressive and Eye opening, but GLquake put the "am" in {higher octave in voice} 'Daaaaaaaammmmmnn'.
    Fast and pretty (for its day).

    Glide: Quake2, software vs Glide mode. No debate until you can pick your jaw off the floor and keep your mouth closed for more than 5 seconds.
    (and stop drooling on my keyboard, dammit).
    Glide was the...damn, what is the word?...pinnacle, saviour, "schwing" that low, med end hardware needed to be 'high endish'.
    (example: friend of min playing tomb raider on a G3 333...Showed him TR on a p200 w/V2...'fuck you, man' was the response {seg})

    DirectX...Thief: Glide vs DX{murmph-snort-bwahahahaha}...Hummmm: 30 fps in glide, .3 in directX? on the same hardware.
    Nowadays, the software has improved incrementally, but the hardware by leaps and bounds...making the s/w look good. Humm.
    Sort of the reverse of Glide--software made the h/w shine--here it is the other way around.

    I think OpenGL is trying to bring back the "make the hardware shine" days back.

    Good luck, because if I understand the way DX is now...it has "absorbed" the api's of GL and Glide and whatever company made the software in the first place (damned if I can find the link...british company I believe).

    Well, I've blathered on long enough. Not bashing, just offering my opinion and what I saw and heard in a nutshell.

    The eyes don't lie...that is the lips job. :\

    Cheers.

    --
    If it is not on fire, it is a software problem.
  6. Re:What about.. by Junks+Jerzey · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Something like SDL you mean?

    SDL is a 2D frame buffer and blitting library for the most part (to be pedantic, it also includes input, CD, and minimal sound libraries). The 3D side of SDL is just OpenGL. So if OpenGL goes away, so do 3D graphics in SDL.

  7. Fahrenheit by codework · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I'm just please that OpenGL is progressing to the next level, especially after the Fahrenheit fiasco. It's my belief that MS used it to distract SGI/ARB from OpenGL to progress DirectX unhindered. And look at market place now, nearly 100% DirectX penetration if we're talking games, and even near that for typical workstation/cad style products that OpenGL considered it's home market.

    Don't get me wrong though. I Love OpenGL. Not only do I consider it the _only_ 3d api, I consider it one of the most professional and designed APIs. It's how an API should be designed.


    Perpixel shading is a very welcome addition and should save some texture memory. Imaging all the Q3 shaders implemented in hardware... yum.. And I'm sure you could implement some nice trees with it too..

    Although all these nice additions to an API won't stop inventive programming. There will still be a need for billboard trees and highlights..

    Even so, the additions to the api will create even more ingenious implementations. Lionheads use of mipmapping for bluring distant objects was ingenious. Look at how far ModeX pushed the pc, or how Mode7 pushed the Nes. With a more powerful API the possibilities appear endless

    Unfortunately I don't see drivers appearing for a long time..

    -J