• @ignism
      link
      92
      edit-2
      6 months ago

      At a mindblowing 60 fps.

      Ok just read the article, that’s a pretty cool project by a single engineer.

        • @ignism
          link
          76 months ago

          I mean, yeah, an extremely simple video card is maybe. But that little birdy is no Quake at 720p running on a gpu build by a gamedev. I don’t see how it even compares. If I bake a pie which turns out great I can be pretty excited about it, even though it’s non trivial to an actual patisserie, to me as a web dev that pie was a pretty cool project.

      • @psmgx
        link
        56 months ago

        Those would go great with my pentium d!

        • gregorum
          link
          fedilink
          English
          4
          edit-2
          6 months ago

          Or my PowerPC Quadra 950! (Which had a Voodoo 2 card, lol)

    • @jettrscga
      link
      56 months ago

      “Modern Windows software” sold it for me.

      It’s almost modern time right now!

  • @gaael
    link
    26
    edit-2
    6 months ago

    Thanks for sharing, this looks awesome ! I can’t waut for the opensource release.

    Btw, did I skip through the article too fast or is tomhardware unable to provide links in its content ? /rant

    Anyway, here are the ones that seemed relevant to me.

    Official website (kinda empty at the moment, but it’s going in my bookmarks)

    Author’s Youtube channel

    Hackernews original discussion in which the author states:

    Let’s be clear here, this is a toy. Beyond being a fun project to work on that could maybe get my foot in the door were I ever to decide to change careers and move into hardware design, this is not going to change the GPU landscape or compete with any of the commercial players. What it might do is pave the way for others to do interesting things in this space. A board with all of the video hardware that you can plug into a computer with all the infrastructure available to play around with accelerating graphics could be a fun, if extremely niche, product. That would also require a significant time and money investment from me, and that’s not something I necessarily want to deal with. When this is eventually open-sourced, those who really are interested could make their own boards.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      146 months ago

      It always baffles me what someone considers “a toy”. Remember Linux? Yeah, it was a toy and “never going to be big”. GIMP is a homework. I love small projects like this and their potential.

  • @tabular
    link
    English
    22
    edit-2
    6 months ago

    open source GPU, HDMI outputs

    huh? Were older HDMI ports open source?

    • DrDominate
      link
      English
      96 months ago

      That’s a good point. No, HDMI is not open source or very open source friendly. At least with current revisions.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        46 months ago

        At least with current revisions.

        I’m vaguely lead to believe that HDMI’s backwards compat with DVI-D (ie why you can have a passive cable from DVI-D to HDMI) means you can use DVI-D signals and an “HDMI-cable compatible” connector. Not sure what this project does however, perhaps it interfaces with pre-made proprietary HDMI logic blocks.

  • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘
    link
    fedilink
    English
    156 months ago

    We get more devs theon this, and we may have the next Nvidia on our hands. Except, you know, not assholes…

  • @agent_flounder
    link
    English
    126 months ago

    Damn. That is no mean feat, I would imagine.

    Although I don’t even know what I don’t know about video cards so it’s no doubt a monumental task. Especially for one guy.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    116 months ago

    Imagine how smoothly it runs non-openGL Doom (software mode on CPU) …

    But Im really happy this exists.

    It shows things can be done differently!

  • K0W4L5K1
    link
    fedilink
    106 months ago

    I didn’t see anything about Linux weird to make an open source GPU and not at least try it on a single distro