Slashdot Mirror


Add Another Core for Faster Graphics

Dzonatas writes "Need a reason for extra cores inside your box? How about faster graphics. Unlike traditional faster GPUs, raytraced graphics scale with extra cores. Brett Thomas writes in his article Parallel Worlds on Bit-Tech, 'But rather than working on that advancement, most of the commercial graphics industry has been intent on pushing raster-based graphics as far as they could go. Research has been slow in raytracing, whereas raster graphic research has continued to be milked for every approximate drop it closely resembles being worth. Of course, it is to be expected that current technology be pushed, and it was a bit of a pipe dream to think that the whole industry should redesign itself over raytracing.' A report by Intel about Ray Tracing shows that a single P4 3.2Ghz is capable of 100 million raysegs, which gives a comfortable 30fps. Intel further states 450 million raysegs is when it gets 'interesting.' Also, quad cores are dated to be available around the turn of the year. Would octacores bring us dual screen or separate right/left real-time raytraced 3D?"

2 of 237 comments (clear)

  1. Gaming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There are already ray traced games. :O

    http://graphics.cs.uni-sb.de/~morfiel/oasen/

  2. Put it on the GPU by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The thing about ray tracing is that it's the archetypal embarrassingly parallel problem that makes heavy use of floating point arithmetic. The thing about GPUs is that they are incredibly parallel processors optimised for for floating point operations.

    Take a look at the proceedings from any graphics conference in the last three or four years, and you will see several papers which involve ray-tracing on a GPU. Actually, not so many recently, because it's been done to death. The most impressive one I saw was at Eurographics in 2004 running non-linear ray tracing. As the rays advanced, their direction was adjusted based on the gravity of objects in the scene. The demo (rendered in realtime) showed a black hole moving in front of a stellar scene and all of the light effects this caused.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News