The Khronos Group: Open Standards, Royalty Free, Dynamic Media Technologies | |
The Khronos Group is a not for profit industry consortium creating open standards for the authoring and acceleration of parallel computing, graphics and dynamic media on a wide variety of platforms and devices. Current APIs are OpenGL, OpenCL, OpenGL ES, | |
Keywords : OpenGL, OpenCL, OpenGL ES, OpenGL SC, EGL, COLLADA, WebGL, OpenKODE, OpenVG, OpenMAX, OpenSL ES, OpenWF, Embedded OpenGL, Embedded GL, GPGPU, General Purpose GPU, 3D, 2D, video, audio, embedded audio, cross-platform, API, digital media, mobile phone, cell | |
H1 tags : The Khronos Group - a non-profit industry consortium to develop, publish and promote open standard, royalty-free media authoring and acceleration standards for desktop and handheld devices, combined with conformance qualification programs for platform and device interoperability. | |
H2 tags : The Khronos Group - Media Authoring and Acceleration; OpenGL - The Industry Standard for High Performance Graphics; OpenCL - The open standard for parallel programming of heterogeneous systems; OpenGL ES - The Standard for Embedded 3D Graphics; EGL - Native Platform Interface; COLLADA - Digital Asset and FX Exchange Schema; WebGL - OpenGL ES 2.0 for the Web; OpenGL SC - Safety Critical Profile; OpenKODE - Khronos Open Development Environment; OpenVG - The Standard for Vector Graphics Acceleration; OpenMAX - The Standard for Media Library Portability; OpenSL ES - The Standard for Embedded Audio Acceleration; OpenWF - The Standard for building composited windowing systems; AMD and MulticoreWare Team to Help Developers Optimize the Use of OpenCL for AMD Fusion APUs; IBM releases OpenCL Common Runtime for Linux on x86 architecture; OpenWebGlobe for WebGL being developed; AMD to discuss its support for OpenCL at AMD Fusion Developer Summit; http://www.streamcomputing.eu/education/streamcomputing-on-tour |
Last Update : | 03/August/2011 |
Google PR : | 6 |
Internal links : | 146 |
External links : | 15 |
Archive : | Check how did the site look in the past? |