• About Us
  • Search
  • Compatibility
  • Forums
  • Archive
  • Channels
  • Home
To take full advantage of all features you need to login or register. Registration is completely free and takes only a few seconds.
Warp2Search.net » News » November 2007 » DirectX 9.0c on Linux with Wine

DirectX 9.0c on Linux with Wine

Posted by: Philipp Esselbach on: 11/23/2007 06:55 AM [ Print | 0 comment(s) ] · 2367 views

Wine Review published a guide about installing DirectX 9.0c on Linux with Wine



Microsoft DirectX is a collection of application programming interfaces for handling tasks related to multimedia, especially game programming and video, on Microsoft platforms. Originally, the names of these APIs all began with Direct, such as Direct3D, DirectDraw, DirectMusic, DirectPlay, DirectSound, and so forth. DirectX, then, was the generic term for all of these Direct-something APIs, and that term became the name of the collection. Over the intervening years, some of these APIs have been deprecated and replaced, so that this naming convention is no longer absolute. In fact, the X has caught on to the point that it has replaced Direct as the common part in the names of new DirectX technologies, including XAct, XInput, and so forth.

Direct3D (the 3D graphics API within DirectX) is widely used in the development of computer games for Microsoft Windows, Microsoft Xbox, and Microsoft Xbox 360. Direct3D is also used by other software applications for visualization and graphics tasks, most notably among the engineering sector for CAD/CAM, because of its ability to quickly render high-quality 3D graphics using DirectX-compatible graphics hardware. As Direct3D is the most widely recognized API in DirectX, it is not uncommon to see the name DirectX used in place of Direct3D

>> DirectX 9.0c on Linux with Wine



Digg it! Del.icio.us Technorati Furl Google Bookmarks

Related Stories

10/25/2007 06:20 PM: DirectX End-User Redistributable 9.0c (November 2007) by Tim Tibbetts
DirectX end-user redistributable that developers can include with their product....

10/04/2007 11:01 AM: The State of DirectX 10 - Image Quality & Performance by Philipp Esselbach
HotHardware.com posted an article on the state of DirectX 10...

09/24/2007 09:45 AM: Windows Vista 3D graphics performance: Part 4 - NVIDIA (DirectX 10) by Philipp Esselbach
Elite Bastards posted part 4 of their Windows Vista 3D graphics performance article series...

09/13/2007 04:45 PM: Windows Vista 3D graphics performance: Part 3 - ATI (DirectX 10) by Philipp Esselbach
Elite Bastard posted part 3 of their Windows Vista 3D graphics performance article series...

08/26/2007 11:45 AM: Gabe Newell: DirectX 10 for Vista was a mistake by Philipp Esselbach
Heise Online reports that Gabe Newell, president of Valve Software, said in an interview that Microsoft made a terrible mistake releasing DirectX 10 for Vista only and excluding Windows XP....


« Some Cool Networking Numbers with Windows Server 2008 File Transfers · DirectX 9.0c on Linux with Wine · Diamond Viper HD3850 Crossfire Review »

Warp2Search.net » News » November 2007 » DirectX 9.0c on Linux with Wine

Latest News

· OCZ DDR3 PC3-16000 Flex II Water Cooled Memory Review
· Buying an HDTV: What You Need to Know
· Mandriva Linux 2009 Beta 2 released
· Twitter Clients For Ubuntu 8.04 Desktop
· Early Look: Asus P6T Deluxe - Intel X58 Begins
· Cooler Master UCP 1100W power supply review
· BFG ES800 Power Supply Review
· Visual Studio 2008 SDK 1.1
· UrlScan v3.0
· Windows Server 2003 R2 VHD 1.1
· Silicon Power 32 GB Solid State Disk Review
· Palit GTX 260 Review
· iPhone 3G - Is It Worth the Hype?
· Danger Den Tower-26 Case Review
· In Win Metal Suit - GunDam Case Review
· J&W RS780UVD-AM2+ mATX Motherboard Review
· Introduction to Wireless USB (WUSB) Review
· QNAP TS-109 II Pro Turbo Nas Review
· ATI Catalyst 8.8 Analysis - XP & Vista
· OCZ DDR2 PC2-9200 Flex II memory Review

Nodes To Friends





Online Users

There are currently 566 user(s) online

© 2007-2008 Esselbach Internet Solutions
All products mentioned are registered trademarks or trademarks of their respective owners.
Read our disclaimer over here and our Privacy Policy over here
Managed with Contentteller(R) Business Edition, (C) 2002-2008 Esselbach Internet Solutions