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The problem is that they don't give real access to the video hardware (unaccelerated access), it only has 256mb of system RAM, and that programming on the Cell is a PITA compared to a more traditional SMP architecture. Combine all that with a relatively low install base and high cost of purchase, and it's not a real surprise that no one's really done much with it yet.Has anything come out thats good for linux on PS3? I still have it installed on my PS3 but haven't turned it on it since I installed about 5 months ago...
He's full of it.This seems like a good place to jump in with a kinda dumb question. This asshat PS3 fanboy that works at my local Gamestop claims he's running Windows on PS3 and using it to run Windows games and applications *rolls eyes hard*. Is this really being done, or is he, as I suspect, full of crap like 99% of all GS employees?
That's hardly _playable_. Yes, if you use qemu, you can do all sorts of weird stuff for show.Yes, it's been done I believe. Quake 3 were among the first games to run with Yellowdog via PS3. Although, as stated above if it does run, it will have to run in software mode.
It's already being done cheaply with new video cards, like AMD's 2400 PRO for $59 that offers both .264 and VC-1 decoding.IMHO, the killer app, if it ever comes, will be massively-accelerated H.264 transcoding - but only if desktop CPUs haven't caught up by that time.
This seems like a good place to jump in with a kinda dumb question. This asshat PS3 fanboy that works at my local Gamestop claims he's running Windows on PS3 and using it to run Windows games and applications *rolls eyes hard*. Is this really being done, or is he, as I suspect, full of crap like 99% of all GS employees?
I said transcoding, not decoding. Those cards aren't going to help you go from MPEG2 to H.264.It's already being done cheaply with new video cards, like AMD's 2400 PRO for $59 that offers both .264 and VC-1 decoding.