Follow TG Daily

Most Discussed Articles

More Discussions»

Articles By Tag

amd Android antitrust apple ARM blackberry china EU Firefox google Green Dam hp ibm intel iphone microsoft mozilla netbook nintendo nokia PS3 Samsung security smartphone Sony twitter upgrade wii Windows 7 Xbox 360
Read more at
   SmallNetBuilder.com
Try our new and free
Price Comparison Service

Partners

Reviews & Rankings



Nvidia updates CUDA, adds Tesla support for Windows Vista

PDF Print E-mail
Hardware
By Wolfgang Gruener   
Monday, December 22, 2008 00:13
Santa Clara (CA) – Nvidia has released a new version of its CUDA platform that exploits the GPGPU capabilities of its graphics processors. There are no new features, but the SDK now supports added support for Windows Vista, Red Hat Linux as well as VisualStudio 2008 on Windows XP. And we wonder what may have happened to the x86 version of the software that was promised twice year, but has not surfaced yet.

The standardization of OpenCL may have changed the GPGPU accelerated computing landscape, but Nvidia has no intention of giving up on its CUDA platform that still relies on a proprietary approach to tap into the processing potential of Nvidia graphics processors.

The company now offers version 2.1 beta as a free download, adding Windows Vista support for Tesla products and 32-bit debugger support for CUDA on RedHat Enterprise Linux 5.x, which is a separate download. Also supported is VisualStudio 2008 support on Windows XP and Vista and Just-In-Time (JIT) compilation for applications that dynamically generate CUDA kernels.

According to Nvidia, new interoperability APIs for Direct3D 9 and Direct3D 10 have been included to accelerate the communication with DirectX applications. There is also “a series of improvements to OpenGL interoperability” as well as “support for recent releases of Linux including Fedora9, OpenSuse 11 and Ubuntu 8.04.”
 
Nvidia, like AMD, recently announced that developers can use its SDK to create cross-platform OpenCL-based GPGPU applications. Proprietary developer solutions like CUDA have remained one of the main roadblocks in mainstream GPGPU software development. Earlier this year, Nvidia had planned to release a version of CUDA for x86 multi-core processors and later mentioned that the software was delayed to Q4 2008. Now our sources tell us that x86 CUDA may not be released at all, which raises questions how future-proof CUDA really is.

At least at this time it seems that the most conclusive development solution may be OpenCL, as the language is supported not only by Nvidia and AMD, but by Intel’s upcoming Larrabee graphics card as well.

Comments (3)Add Comment
Dec 22, 2008 01:50     
Dec 23, 2008 05:52     
Dec 23, 2008 16:19     

Write comment
smaller | bigger

busy
Recommend article:
Slashdot
Digg
Delicious
Technorati
YahooMyWeb
Stumble
NewsVine
Ma.gnolia
Subscribe to the TG Daily Newsletter
Email:
 

Shop Keywords: Nvidia, CUDA, Tesla, OpenCL

-view -hardware -135 --135
Powered By Page_Cache by Ircmaxell
Generated in 0.80207490921 Seconds