AMD Looks to Intel-owned Havok for Physics

June 12, 2008 | by Nick Mokey

In a bit of unlikely cooperation, AMD has partnered with a division of Intel to work on physics simulation in its processors and GPUs.

When Nvidia snapped up Ageia in early 2008 and rolled the company’s PhysX physics engine into its own Nvidia GPUs, things looked sour for AMD. Intel, after all, had acquired the Havok physics engine in September of the previous year, Nvida had Ageia, but AMD and its ATI Radeon line of GPUs were left with nothing to compete.  Now the jolly green giant is seeking refuge in the bosom of its main competitor by cooperating with Intel-owned Havok.

The company announced on Thursday that it was working with Havok to optimize physics across its entire product line of both system processors and GPUs. According to AMD, much of the research will go into how to leverage the Radeon’s parallel processing capabilities for physics.

“The feedback that we consistently receive from leading game developers is that core game play simulation should be performed on CPU cores. The clear priority of game developers is performance and scalability on of the CPU,” said Havok’s managing director David O’Meara, in a statement. “Beyond core simulation, however, the capabilities of massively parallel products offer technical possibilities for computing certain types of simulation. We look forward to working with AMD to explore these possibilities.

While both companies merely announced a research agreement, the results of the work might very well be seen in a forthcoming generation of Radeon GPUs or game-oriented AMD CPUs.

Post Your Comment...Comments

Kevin on Jun 12th, 2008 at 12:38 PM:

I would love to see more of this type of cooperation between different/competing companies in all industries. Competition and the sharing of ideas are two of the best driving forces for technological growth and progression.

James B. on Jun 12th, 2008 at 9:18 PM:

AMD has to be desperate at this point, and their move here totally makes sense: Do whatever it takes to compete with Nvidia.

Comment on this article




Please keep your comments relevant to this article. Email addresses are not displayed, they are only required to verify you are human.

When you submit your comment, an email will be sent to your email address with a confirmation link. Once you have clicked on that confirmation link your comment will be posted.

HTML is not allowed.




Join our newsletter to keep up to date on the latest Digital Trends content like Videos, Reviews, News and more delivered directly to your email!


Plus, get early access to contests and specials from our partners. Join today!





Loading...