![]() ![]() ![]() Linux OpenGL benchmark results in articles coming up over the next few days. Stay tuned for the AMD and NVIDIA Windows vs. These results show that at least For Skylake, the Windows OpenGL driver remains much faster than the open-source Linux driver, along with being more featureful. Under Windows, the Core i5 6600K had OpenGL 4.4 support along with OpenCL 2.0 (the Beignet open-source OpenCL driver is limited to OpenCL 1.2 while work is underway on CL 2.0 enablement). This package install Intel HD Graphics Driver (Skylake Platform) SHOP SUPPORT. On Linux, the Intel driver continues to be limited to OpenGL 3.3 support although they should have OpenGL ~4.2 release hopefully by the next Mesa release at year's end. There's also some tests that the Intel Windows driver can run where as the Linux driver cannot. The HD Graphics (Skylake) can be found in mobile processors specified at 6 W TDP and is therefore suited for passively cooled 2-in-1 laptops and tablets. graphics driver was used for benchmarking this Skylake system. The synthetic GpuTest results showed the Intel Windows driver to be significantly faster than the current open-source Skylake graphics driver with Mesa 11.1-devel and Linux 4.3. On the Windows side, the latest Intel 20. IntelĀ® Graphics Installer 1.4. ![]() A set of 89 patches were published at the end of last week to enable basic Skylake Gen9 graphics. The Intel graphics chips that are part of many Intel processors are fairly well supported on GNU/Linux. JavaScript is required to view these results or log-in to Phoronix Premium. While Intel's Skylake isn't arriving until the second half of 2015 as the successor to Broadwell, the Intel Open-Source Technology Center has already published their initial Linux enablement for Skylake with its HD Graphics 'Gen 9' display hardware.
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