A team of University of Illinois at Urbana — Champaign (U.I.U.C.) physicists has assembled a supercomputer consisting of several hundred superfast graphics processing units (GPUs)-- typically used for rendering highly
sophisticated video game graphics — that they think will help them build a simulation depicting how chromatophore proteins turn light energy into chemical energy, a process called photosynthesis.
GPUs, originally designed for rendering highly
sophisticated video game graphics, can now be programmed to process information between 10 and 20 times faster than CPUs.
Not exact matches
By providing solutions for the entire particle system effects pipeline, you save valuable production time and improve the quality of your
video game graphics, thanks to the use of
sophisticated, advanced particle effects.