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Hardware | Posted by Max at Aug. 19, 2008 - 11:36 pm


At its most basic level the HYDRA Engine is an attempt to build a completely GPU-independent graphics scaling technology - imagine having NVIDIA graphics cards from the GeForce 6600 to the GTX 280 working together with little to no software overhead with nearly linear performance scaling. HYDRA uses both software and hardware designed by Lucid to improve gaming performance seamlessly to the application and graphics cards themselves and uses dedicated hardware logic to balance graphics information between the CPU and GPUs.

Why does Lucid feel the traditional methods that NVIDIA and AMD/ATI have been implementing are not up to the challenge? The two primary multi-GPU rendering modes that both companies use are split frame rendering and alternate frame rendering. Lucid challenges that both have significant pitfalls that their HYDRA Engine technology can correct. For split frame rendering the down side is the need for all GPUs to replicate ALL the texture and geometry data and thus memory bandwidth and geometry shader limitations of a single GPU remain. For alternate frame rendering the drawback is latency introduced by alternating frames between X GPUs and latency required for inter-frame dependency resolution.


I can't tell yet if this is going to be revolutionary or pointless. It comes down to this: if AMD or NVIDIA figures out how to run similar tech, either on the CPU or through the chipset, HYDRA is out. If AMD or NVIDIA figures out how to do this with drivers, HYDRA is really out. Doubtlessly, I, and you know, gamers everywhere, want to see this kind of tech yesterday so here's where they might profit: get this fabed and licensed right away, X2 cards are popular and super-sweet, and third party types, cough laptop types cough, can take advantage of this before AMD/ NVIDIA does.

The fact that they haven't been bought yet tells me that either a) the graphics card companies are extra-broke and extra-extra-retarded, or b) it's not going to matter.

And having spoken recently with someone high up in the driver world, I'm going with b). You could hear it on the breeze... wait for Windows 7...
[Read Full Story at PC Perspective]

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