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TransGaming Releases Cedega 4.1

gavriels writes "Today, TransGaming released Cedega 4.1, a new update to our software that lets Windows games run on Linux systems. The new update adds support for Far Cry and Anarchy Online, and implements a completely new 3D pipeline which executes the traditional Direct3D Fixed Function rendering path using dynamically generated OpenGL vertex programs, providing great performance improvements on cards with sufficient vertex program capabilities. We also added MMX accelerated sound mixing, fixed copy protection issues in several games, and improved Pixel Shader support, among other things."

6 of 56 comments (clear)

  1. Xinerama by Apreche · · Score: 4, Informative

    Still doesn't support xinerama. Neither does doom 3. All they have to do is add one lousy command line argument just like mplayer has.

    mplayer -xineramascreen 1 video.avi

    Then make the application you are running show up only on that xinerama screen. It's rather simple, but nobody does it. Even linux native games like vegastrike don't do it. It makes gaming very difficult. Windows that are supposed to open in the middle of the screen show up in the empty space between monitors. And full screen apps engulf both screens.

    I beg everyone developing linux apps to add proper support for xinerama. Please.

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    1. Re:Xinerama by 5E-0W2 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Just run it on a separate (non-xinerama) X server on a different virtual terminal, you get the added bonus of being able to switch easily between your desktop and your game without having to resort to the games windowed/full screen function.

    2. Re:Xinerama by Cthefuture · · Score: 4, Informative

      Well, if you have a nVidia card you can just use TwinView with meta modes.

      For example, my normal setup is 3200x1200 but I have meta-modes that disable one screen. So when Doom3 requests a 800x600 screen it automatically turns off the other monitor.

      UT2004 is not quite so smart, but I just click my little gnome-xrandr applet and select a single screen resolution, then start UT2004. Changing back is just as simple.

      I believe randr is actually available for any set of cards. It's the extension that lets you change resolution on the fly in X. So even without a nVidia card it should be quite painless.

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  2. Re:What about render to texture? by gavriels · · Score: 4, Informative

    We have supported render to texture in Cedega, for both Direct3D and OpenGL apps for quite some time. It isn't as efficient in OpenGL in Linux, due to the lack of a specific extension to support it, but it still works. We render to a pbuffer, then copy to the target texture. You can see this to good effect in Far Cry, with their water reflections, for example.

    Take care,
    -Gav

  3. Re:Star Wars Battlefront ? by ecliptik · · Score: 5, Informative

    I attempted to install it the other week, but I ran into the wonderful cd-rom locking problem and was unable to switch to the second disk during the install.

    Transgaming claims Cedega 4.0 supports switching cd's, but it's hit or miss. Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy is an example of this, as their FAQ states you need to copy the second cd's contents to your hard drive and point the installer there when it asks.

    I really wish there was a simpler way to use cd drives with a stock GNU/Linux kernel instead of hunting down supermount patches or strange hacks like Transgaming tries. It's a major issue that that's is holding back as a desktop OS.

  4. Xinerama has no OpenGL support. by reality-bytes · · Score: 4, Informative


    Its not that Wine or Doom3 don't support Xinerama but that Xinerama doesn't yet support OpenGL.

    However, you *can* run multi-head without Xinerama and run as many OpenGL in-game displays as you can fit video-cards in your system.

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