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In the free version only the part 1, "Return to Proxycon", of the demo is shown now. [13] September 29, 2004 Windows 2000 Windows XP (SP2) DirectX 9.0(c) Unsupported 3DMark06: The sixth generation 3DMark. [14] The three game tests, renamed "graphics tests", from 3DMark05 were carried over and updated, and a fourth new test "Deep Freeze" was added.
This is a list of models and meshes commonly used in 3D computer graphics for testing and demonstrating rendering algorithms and visual effects. Their use is important for comparing results, similar to the way standard test images are used in image processing.
Free/open source (GPL) or proprietary AMD CodeXL by AMD: Linux, Windows For GPU profiling and debugging: OpenCL. A tool suite for GPU profiling, GPU debugger and a static kernel analyzer. Free/open source (MIT) AMD uProf by AMD: Linux, Windows C, C++, .NET, Java, Fortran Code profiler, does sampling based profiling on AMD processors. Proprietary
Heaven and other benchmarks by UNIGINE Company are often used by hardware reviewers to compare performance of GPUs [1] [2] [3] and by overclockers for online and offline competitions in GPU overclocking [4] [5]. Running Heaven (or another benchmark by UNIGINE Company) produces a performance score: the higher the numbers, the better the ...
Non-hardware-related vendors may also assist free graphics initiatives. Red Hat has two full-time employees (David Airlie and Jérôme Glisse) working on Radeon software, [102] and the Fedora Project sponsors a Fedora Graphics Test Week event before the launch of their new Linux distribution versions to test free graphics drivers. [103]
Users can choose a workload preset, Low to Extreme, or set the parameters by custom. The benchmark 3D scene is an office of a fictional genius scientist from the middle of the 20th century. The scene is GPU-intensive because of SSRTGI (Screen-Space Ray-Traced Global Illumination), proprietary dynamic lighting technology by Unigine.
TechPowerUp GPU-Z (or just GPU-Z) is a lightweight utility designed to provide information about video cards and GPUs. [2] The program displays the specifications of Graphics Processing Unit (often shortened to GPU) and its memory; also displays temperature, core frequency, memory frequency, GPU load and fan speeds.
The data set is often used to test various graphics algorithms, including polygonal simplification, compression, and surface smoothing, [2] similar to the Stanford bunny (1993). The model is available in different file formats ( ply , vrml , vl, etc.) on the internet for free.