Spotlight | Reviews | Current Issue | Academy | Newsletter | Subscribe | Shop |
Departments

Yatego Shopping
Yatego International
Germany's Shoppingmall No.1! 10000 Shops and over 3,4 Mio. Products. Computer, Software and Technic Guidebooks.

user friendly

Admin Magazine

ADMIN Network & Security

Subscribe now and save!

ADMIN - Explore the new world of system administration! Special introductory offer! Order by September 30th to save 10% off the regular subscription price! Each issue delivers technical solutions to the real-world problems you face every day. Learn the latest techniques for better:

  • network security
  • system management
  • troubleshooting
  • performance tuning
  • virtualization
  • cloud computing

 

on Windows, Linux, Solaris, and popular varieties of Unix.

http://www.admin-magazine.com/

  linuxpromagazine.com » Issues » 2006 » 68 » LIFE IN 3D  

Print this page. Recommend
Share

OpenGL and the Linux desktop

LIFE IN 3D

New technologies will change the way you view the objects on your Linux desktop.

The X graphics system has been at the heart of the Unix GUI desktop since 1984. Of course, its horizons expanded slowly. In the early years, no one knew they even needed a graphics subsystem, and if anyone did venture out to try X with one of the few applications that supported it, they needed to be ready for late nights of tinkering. But the X system kept getting better, and the X protocol, with its surrounding technologies, served a key role in the evolution of Linux. When graphic desktop systems came into vogue with the appearance of MacOS and a Mac clone known as Windows, Linux could build its own equivalent graphic desktop upon the foundation of X. Today’s Linux graphic desktops are every bit as powerful and far more flexible than the Apple and Windows equivalents, but the simple fact is, developers and hardware vendors – for all platforms – have gotten a bit restless with the ordinary, garden variety X.


Read full article as PDF »


Comments


Print this page. Recommend
Share
Get your backstage pass to Linux!

If you're ready for a deeper look, Linux Magazine gives you a view behind the scenes.

Don't miss out on the tools, tutorials, and reviews you'll need to unlock the secrets of Linux.

more...