Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 26th Nov 2009 00:09 UTC, submitted by Cytor
Mozilla & Gecko clones A few days ago, we heard about Microsoft planning to include Direct2D acceleration in the yet-to-come IE9, thus leveraging today's poweful GPUs to render web content. Mozilla didn't fall behind: last Sunday, Firefox hacker Bas Schouten revealed a build of Firefox 3.7 with built-in Direct2D acceleration on his blog. His performance tests claim that popular sites like Facebook and Twitter render twice as fast compared to Firefox without Direct2D rendering. More complex sites do not see a lot of benefits, tough. This build requires DirectX 10 and a WDDM 1.0 compatible graphics drive, and thus, Windows Vista or 7. Download it here.
Thread beginning with comment 396632
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
RE: Does it work with RDP
by n4cer on Thu 26th Nov 2009 18:03 UTC in reply to "Does it work with RDP"
n4cer
Member since:
2005-07-06

I'm curious - does this even work via RDP? A good percentage of the time that I use a windows box, it's via Remote Desktop...


D2D uses D3D primitive remoting to render on a remote GPU via RDP for Windows 7 clients (and presumably Vista with the platform update and latest RDP client). Bitmap remoting is used for clients that can't use primative remoting.

Reply Parent Score: 3