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Mesa, also called Mesa3D and The Mesa 3D Graphics Library, is an open source implementation of OpenGL, Vulkan, and other graphics API specifications. Mesa translates these specifications to vendor-specific graphics hardware drivers.
The Microsoft Windows platform specific Cryptographic Application Programming Interface (also known variously as CryptoAPI, Microsoft Cryptography API, MS-CAPI or simply CAPI) is an application programming interface included with Microsoft Windows operating systems that provides services to enable developers to secure Windows-based applications using cryptography.
Brian Paul receiving the FSF Award for the Advancement of Free Software from Richard Stallman. Brian E. Paul is a computer programmer who originally wrote and maintained the source code for the open source Mesa graphics library until 2012, and is still active in the project.
The predecessor to Visual C++ was called Microsoft C/C++.There was also a Microsoft QuickC 2.5 and a Microsoft QuickC for Windows 1.0. The Visual C++ compiler is still known as Microsoft C/C++ and as of the release of Visual C++ 2015 Update 2, is on version 14.0.23918.0.
It features support of several languages and has Mesa 3D, OpenGL, and GLX 3D graphics extensions [6] capabilities. The Xming X server is based on Cygwin/X , [ 9 ] the X.Org Server . It is cross-compiled on Linux with the MinGW compiler suite and the Pthreads -Win32 multi-threading library.
4.0, 4.5 4.5.2: 4: 2014-05-05 [21] 2022-04-26: Visual Studio 2015 — — Vista SP2, 7 SP1, 8, 8.1: 2008 SP2, 2008 R2 SP1, 2012, 2012 R2: 4.0-4.5.1 4.6: 4: 2015-07-20 [22] 2022-04-26: Visual Studio 2015: 10 v1507 — Vista SP2, 7 SP1, 8, 8.1 Update: 2008 SP2, 2008 R2 SP1, 2012, 2012 R2 Update: 4.0-4.5.2 4.6.1: 4: 2015-11-30 [23] 2022-04-26 ...
In the middle: the FOSS stack, composed out of DRM & KMS driver, libDRM and Mesa 3D.Right side: Proprietary drivers: Kernel BLOB and User-space components. nouveau (/ n uː ˈ v oʊ /) is a free and open-source graphics device driver for Nvidia video cards and the Tegra family of SoCs written by independent software engineers, with minor help from Nvidia employees.
In March 2008 DRI2 was mostly done, [27] [28] [29] but it couldn't make into X.Org Server version 1.5 [14] and had to wait until version 1.6 from February 2009. [30] The DRI2 extension was officially included in the X11R7.5 release of October 2009. [31] The first public version of the DRI2 protocol (2.0) was announced in April 2009. [32]