NVidia Cripples PhysX "Open" API
An anonymous reader writes "In a foot-meet-bullet type move, NVidia is going to disable PhysX engine if you are using a display adapter other than one that came from their company. This despite the fact that you may have an NVidia card on your system specifically to do this type of processing. 'For a variety of reasons some development expense, some quality assurance and some business reasons Nvidia will not support GPU accelerated PhysX with Nvidia GPUs while GPU rendering is happening on non-Nvidia GPUs.' Time to say hello to Microsoft dx physics or Intel's Havok engine."
Havok is a better engine anyway.
But that's the problem with corporate buyings anyway. Even if its kinda wrong to stop supporting the other platforms, they have every right to do so.
Why is this not anti-trust? When you paid for the nVidia card to put into your machine why should its functions depend on whether or not a competitors hardware is present? What if Windows said uh-oh you have Linux installed on another partition, disabling Windows...
Shh.
At least he was 33.3% truthful.
...will it my $TERM faster?
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First they scoop up PhysX and try to create a market for PPUs. Now the only way PhysX is ever going to get any use is out of pure coincidence. Not the smartest move for Nvidia to make when Ati/AMD is on their heels with a new line of cards.
It is no standard. PhysX was an API made by a company (Ageia) who wanted to cell physics acceleration cards. Their cards never sold well, but the free beer software libraries were used by a number of people (the libraries supported CPU execution as well). Then NVIDIA bought them and ported the thing to run on their GPUs. So I see this ending up like the 3Dfx Glide API for 3D graphics - some historic games used it, such as Mechwarrior, but no one uses it anymore.
physx seemed nice until they tried to close source it. Does Nvidia have anything left this round? Bad Yields, physx being stupid and abusive when disabled (it only uses 1 cpu core when on AMD for example instead of even all threads). Not to mention their crippling of batman as well.
So what's left for Nvidia? I don't see a whole lot.
No. The framework would only run on their GPUs. However, you could have one of their cards in the system to do purely physics calculations, and then use a competitor's card to do the actual display and 3d rendering. They've now disabled this, so if your monitors are connected to, say, and ATI card, you can no longer use the Nvidia card in your system for physics processing.
Before you discount this as an unlikely scenario, consider motherboards with onboard NVidia chipsets. These are usually underpowered for full time duty, but are perfectly suited to being used for physics calculations while a more powerful ATI card in the PCI-E slot does the graphics rendering. This is actually a fairly likely setup these days, and NVidia has just said they're going to block it.
Personally, I agree with others who have pointed out this must be an anti-trust issue. Intel and Microsoft have both been fined heavily recently for doing exactly this kind of anti-competitive behaviour.
-- sudo.ca
Once the big game engines and physics libraries get generic support for GPU programming through OpenCL, this will all be pretty moot anyway. From what I can tell, the bullet physics library is already developing this, and I am sure closed source competitors are doing that as well. Relying on anything that will only run on a single vendor's hardware is just a losing business proposition (unless that vendor pays you for it, which I guess is how PhysX got going).
OpenGL3 is the first time that companies are breaking away from windows.
It seems like OpenAL was the first. Creative have been visibly pushing it now that Vista's forced-software-only sound API has made their sound cards pointless.
http://www.bulletphysics.com/
I don't have any affiliation with the project other than I've used it in my homegrown game engine that has never left my hard drive. It is however rather easy to use. When I was looking for a physics engine, Bullet turned out to be the best license, code base, and documentation set out there for no cost.
Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
From the NVIDIA PhysX FAQ:
Can I use an NVIDIA GPU as a PhysX processor and a non-NVIDIA GPU for regular display graphics?
No. There are multiple technical connections between PhysX processing and graphics that require tight collaboration between the two technologies. To deliver a good experience for users, NVIDIA PhysX technology has been fully verified and enabled using only NVIDIA GPUs for graphics.
Its anti-consumer, but that doesn't trigger an anti-trust charge, they don't have a monopoly.
Why does everyone scream like its illegal when a company does something they don't like? Unless they are king of the hill and using their powers to force others into capitulating with them, its not an issue for the courts. You don't have to buy nVidia. You don't have to use PhysX. You don't have to buy a Voodoo 3 card. Sure a game may only support one of the above, but thats not something that justifies going after nVidia unless they owned the market.
Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
How can it be anti-trust if (a) they aren't a monopoly, and (b) they are disabling their own hardware ?
If they caused the ATI card to not function then I could understand it, but a secondary function on their own card ?
What about a CRT is outdated? It has better black levels, faster refresh, and higher brightness than an LCD. It's analog but good cabling will still result in a crystal clear image. I think the primary disadvantages of CRTs is that widescreen is so costly as to be impractical. They are heavy. And they suck a lot of power. but in terms of image quality a CRT is still extremely good.
CRTs are "outdated" because businesses want to sell LCDs. Flat and light is sexy. And LCDs sold like crazy back when the image quality was dramatically inferior to a CRT, and it took them years to catch up.
CRT technology is not obsolete, but the marketing of CRTs is dead. If you want to argue that we should use technology based on marketability alone, be my guest. I suspect most slashdotters will rip into you pretty brutally.
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
They didn't drop support for "CRT's". They decided that their stereographics driver would only work in the following configurations:
- anaglyph glasses with a "whatever" monitor (horrible color distortion and headache-inducing ghosting ensues).
- *THEIR* shutter glasses, with *THEIR* overpriced "partnered" LCD monitors.
Now, what is the difference (tech-wise) between their shutter glasses and mine? Only the fact that theirs send a specific "yes I'm nvidia" signal back to the card. What is the capability difference between their overpriced "partnered" LCD monitors and my 120Hz-capable CRT? Two things: Jack and Shit.
This is not about "dropping support for outdated technology." Prior to what they pulled, I could plug in an industry-standard shutter glasses set made by any of a number of manufacturers, combine them with any monitor capable of 120-Hz refresh (whether CRT, LCD, certain televisions, or even a few projector models), and enjoy stereoscopic gaming. After their "update" to the drivers and subsequent "update" to the stereoscopic drivers, the Nvidia cards would only recognize *THEIR* proprietary glasses (which again, hardware-wise are no different than the old type save for sending a "hi I'm from nvidia" signal to the card) and would only interoperate with a precious few "specially chosen" 120Hz LCD's.
This had nothing to do with "dropping support" for "obsolete equipment" (which wasn't in any way, shape, or form) and everything to do with trying to milk people for $500+ on a new rig by forcibly crippling industry-standard hardware.
Its anti-consumer, but that doesn't trigger an anti-trust charge, they don't have a monopoly.
The perpetrator doesn't have to have a monopoly for tying to be illegal - in U.S., for example, you only need "sufficient market power" to affect "not insubstantial amount of interstate commerce in the tied product market". I dare say that NVidia has pretty damn substantial market power in GPU niche, and it is quite likely to affect sales of all other GPUs in a significant way. In the end, of course, it's up to the courts to decide, if it comes to that, but the allegation is not without merit.
That was a ridiculous thing to post.
A CRT doesn't need support, it needs to not be sabotaged.
His glasses don't need support, they need to not be sabotaged.
Not supporting both of them takes more effort than ignoring them.
Competent support of all that hardware would take less space in code than this comment window is high. Going to the trouble to restrict it was much more... *after* the meetings, licenses, and money exchanges had all taken place.
The cynic in me believes that someone with a debugger is probably a single (or two) flipped bit(s) away from a working setup.
Platform advocacy is like choosing a favorite severely developmentally disabled child.
MS pulled a smackdown on Creative. Creative cards (and drivers, especially drivers! [FU creative]) have been sucking for years.
So, new OS comes out and MS removes all the hooks that 3rd parties have been putting into the Windows sound system, instantly leveling the playing field and removing a major source of Windows instability.
One of the few times MS really did the right thing.