Linked by David Adams on Tue 23rd Sep 2008 00:12 UTC, submitted by zz
3D News, GL, DirectX SGI and the Khronos Group published a new license for OpenGL. "The license, which now mirrors the free X11 license used by X.Org, further opens previously released SGI graphics software that has set the industry standard for visualization software and has proven essential to GNU/Linux and a host of applications." New new license is shorter than the the FreeB license in version 1.1, which wasn't an Open Source license.
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RE[3]: Signal of doom...
by WereCatf on Tue 23rd Sep 2008 09:24 UTC in reply to "RE[2]: Signal of doom..."
WereCatf
Member since:
2006-02-15

What exactly does OpenGL lack when it comes to hardware support? When ATI or nVidia release a new piece of silicon, why is it that the demos showcasing the new features are always written in OpenGL? Ever hear of OpenGL extensions? 6 months later, and Direct X may get the feature if ATI/nVidia loby Microsoft enough for it.

Vendor-specific extensions is not the same thing as having something supported by the OpenGL spec itself. Vendor-specific is exactly that, vendor-specific. I am not aware of what specifically is lacking but I also have heard OpenGL is lagging _slightly_ behind. However, they also seem to be trying to catch up, they are starting to deprecate old features and are planning to release a new version shortly (~6 months, according to them). They'll probably try to catch up with the few lagging features after that.

Btw..doesn't DX also support vendor-specific extensions..?

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