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[return to "3dfx: So powerful it’s kind of ridiculous"]
1. ChuckM+25[view] [source] 2023-03-05 05:41:02
>>BirAda+(OP)
My first video accelerator was the Nvidia NV-1 because a friend of mine was on the design team and he assured me that NURBs were going to be the dominant rendering model since you could do a sphere with just 6 of them, whereas triangles needed like 50 and it still looked like crap. But Nvidia was so tight fisted with development details and all their "secret sauce" none of my programs ever worked on it.

Then I bought a 3DFx Voodoo card and started using Glide and it was night and day. I had something up the first day and every day thereafter it seemed to get more and more capable. That was a lot of fun.

In my opinion, Direct X was what killed it most. OpenGL was well supported on the Voodoo cards and Microsoft was determined to kill anyone using OpenGL (which they didn't control) to program games if they could. After about 5 years (Direct X 7 or 8) it had reached feature parity but long before that the "co marketing" dollars Microsoft used to enforce their monopoly had done most of the work.

Sigh.

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2. pjmlp+a8[view] [source] 2023-03-05 06:28:14
>>ChuckM+25
Like everything else, Khronos did not need help from Microsoft to mess up OpenGL, with its spaghetti soup and lack of tooling, that makes every graphics programming newbie start by hunting and building from scratch, the infrastructure to make a rendering engine.

Vulkan is just as bad into this regard, with complexity turned to eleven. No wonder people call it a GPU hardware abstraction API, not a graphics API.

And on the Web they couldn't have better idea than throw away all the existing GLSL, to replace it with a Rust inspired shading language.

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