By Darren Allan
AMD has announced the release of the Vulkan 1.0 spec, an API built from the company’s Mantle GPU tech. It means that Vulkan will soon be packaged into a beta version of the firm’s Radeon driver for its graphics cards.
This new driver, the company claims, will enable game devs to “remove historical software bottlenecks” and deliver “new, rich visual gaming experiences”, no less.
So how does all this work? Essentially, Vulkan is designed to be a low-overhead graphics API (application programming interface). The lesser overheads it delivers in comparison to OpenGL mean a lighter background load for the GPU and CPU – meaning that this spare power can be used elsewhere for stuff the gamer will actually notice like better graphics and performance levels.
It offers more direct control over the GPU, makes better use of the full capabilities of multi-core processors (i.e. utilising all the cores), and Vulkan gives access to GPU hardware features which aren’t normally accessible via OpenGL.
More than Windows
Vulkan isn’t just about Windows games either, as the API is a cross-platform affair spanning not just Windows 7 and onwards, but also Linux and Android.
Raja Koduri, Senior VP and Chief Architect, Radeon Technologies Group, AMD, commented: “The promotion of …read more
Source:: techradar.com – Computing Components