3D Studio For MS-DOS Running on PCEM

Robert Kixmiller
Robert Kixmiller
3.3 هزار بار بازدید - 2 سال پیش - The lines between home desktop
The lines between home desktop and workstation started to blur with the arrival of the 486. The PC started to become the premier platform for powerful applications. This was the case of 3d Modelers. 3d Modeling was the ultimate demonstration of the capabilities of computers. For the longest of times, the 3d Modelers were constrained to ultra-powerful UNIX workstations made by the major OEM's. However as the 80's progressed, the 3d Modelers started to make there way to consumer PC's starting with the Commodore Amiga. The Amiga, with its custom chips, made it the primer platform for 3d Modelers. However, as the 90's continued and Commodore started to implode, such applications started to make there way to the x86 PC.

POVRay and Bentley Microstation demonstrated that the PC could do 3D Modeling like those UNIX workstations or Amiga's. Autodesk released 3D Studio for DOS. Not to be confused with the later 3D Studio Max, which is the windows port of the program, the original further enhanced 3D Modeling on the PC. Not only could 3D models be created, but they could be rendered as well using advanced raytracing and enhanced lighting along with detailed textures. Not only that, 3D Modelers often made good benchmarks when testing the performance of the PC's processing capabilities.

DOSBox is emulating a PC Workstation with a Pentium Processor set to max cycles, 16MB's of RAM, S3 Trio 32/64 SVGA Video Adapter and Creative Labs SoundBlaster 16.

Songs Used:
Eden by Necros
https://www.exotica.org.uk/mediawiki/...

Wired96r by Necros
https://www.exotica.org.uk/mediawiki/...
Amiga ExoticA Database

Software Used:
Recorded With OBS Studio
Composed In Kdenlive

Hardware Used:
PC equipped with a AMD
FX-4300 Quad-Core Processor
running at 3.8GHz
Nvidia GTX 950 GPU
2 سال پیش در تاریخ 1401/07/09 منتشر شده است.
3,323 بـار بازدید شده
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