VMGL provides hardware acceleration for OpenGL applications running inside virtual machines. VMGL works for Xen, VMware, and X11-based OS's, LInux, FreeBSD and OpenSolaris
http://www.cs.toronto.edu...
VMGL provides hardware acceleration for OpenGL applications running inside virtual machines. VMGL works for Xen, VMware, and X11-based OS's, LInux, FreeBSD and OpenSolaris http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~andreslc/v...
Like to rate videos and let people know what you think?
Automatically share your ratings, favorites, and more on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Reader with YouTube Autoshare.
Autoshare makes certain YouTube activities public on the services you choose. Select only the services you are comfortable with - like Facebook, Twitter, or Google Reader - to let your friends know what you like on YouTube. You can turn Autoshare off at any time.
Like to share videos with friends?
Automatically share your ratings, favorites, and more on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Reader with YouTube Autoshare.
Autoshare makes certain YouTube activities public on the services you choose. Select only the services you are comfortable with - like Facebook, Twitter, or Google Reader - to let your friends know what you like on YouTube. You can turn Autoshare off at any time.
Hardware acceleration is bullshit. I can run purely software rendered games faster than the same thing in OpenGL. I know, I know, I should buy a new "graphics card" but who cares when I can get over 200 FPS in just software? I'll give you hardware acceleration- it's called a CPU!
Ouch! Oh well, I hope someone does. I'm not a coder, more like an end user. I'd really like to get this running on my linux distros in virtual environments. I've been wanting to test out some OpenGL stuff, but alas, I guess I'll have to wait...
Autoshare makes certain YouTube activities public on the services you choose. Select only the services you are comfortable with - like Facebook, Twitter, or Google Reader - to let your friends know what you like on YouTube. You can turn Autoshare off at any time.
I was reading through your documentation and it calls for edits to the host machine with Linux commands.
If this is not the case, can Windows be the host and how does the documentation reflect this?