Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Windows 10, DirectX Raytracing support added [92] 10.00.18362.0116 May 19, 2019: Windows 10, Variable Rate Shading (VRS) support added [93] 12.2 10.00.19041.0928 November 10, 2020: Windows 10, Ultimate 10.00.22000.1000 October 5, 2021 Windows 11, Added native refresh rate switching [94] and improved graphics capabilities to Windows Subsystem ...
Before Direct3D 10, new versions of the API introduced support for new hardware capabilities, however these capabilities were optional and had to be queried with "capability bits" or "caps". Direct3D 10.1 was the first to use a concept of "feature levels" [1] [3] [6] to support both Direct3D 10.0 and 10.1 hardware. [3] [7] [8]
Direct3D 12 version 2004 – Windows 10 May 2020 Update (version 2004) brings support for DirectX 12 Ultimate, Mesh & Amplification Shaders, [137] Sampler Feedback, [138] as well DirectX Raytracing Tier 1.1 [139] and memory allocation improvements.
The last generation of motherboard integrated graphics. Full hardware DirectX 10 support starting with GMA X3500. Each EU has a 128-bit wide FPU that natively executes four 32-bit operations per clock cycle.
Intel introduced DirectX 10 for the X3100 and X3500 GPUs in the Vista 15.9 drivers in 2008, though any release of DX10 drivers for the X3000 is uncertain. WDDM 1.1 is supported by X3100 but DXVA-HD is not. OpenGL 2.0 support is available since Vista 15.11 drivers [63] and XP 14.36 drivers. [64] Windows 8 ships with a driver for the X3100. [65]
Windows 10 also introduced the Microsoft Edge web browser, a virtual desktop system, a window and desktop management feature called Task View, support for fingerprint and face recognition login, new security features for enterprise environments, and DirectX 12.
DirectX Diagnostic Tool (DxDiag) is a diagnostics tool used to test DirectX functionality and troubleshoot video- or sound-related hardware problems. DirectX Diagnostic can save text files with the scan results.
Ion GPUs are DirectX 10.0 and OpenGL 3.3 compliant. They also support CUDA and OpenCL. They can play 1080p H.264, MPEG-2 and VC-1 video using VDPAU or PureVideo HD. [2] ION-LE–based systems shared the same basic hardware as ION but lack Vista and DirectX 10 support. [3]