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Multiprocessor Methods for Computer Graphics Rendering

Scott Whitman

$164

Hardback

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English
Jones and Bartlett Publishers, Inc
02 November 1992
This comprehensive work merges two of the hottest topics in computer science: parallel computing and computer graphics. Selected Topics from the Table of Contents: -Overview of Accelerated Rendering Techniques -Overview of Parallel Methods for Image Generation -Issues in Parallel Algorithm Development -Overview of Base Level Implementation -Comparison of Task Partitioning Schemes -Characterization of Other Parameters on Performance
By:  
Imprint:   Jones and Bartlett Publishers, Inc
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 20mm
Weight:   544g
ISBN:   9780867202298
ISBN 10:   0867202297
Pages:   232
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Undergraduate ,  Further / Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Preface, Chapter 1: Introduction, Chapter 2: Overview of Parallel Methods for Image Generation, Chapter 3: Issues in Parallel Algorithm Development, Chapter 4: Overview of Base Level Implementation, Chapter 5: Comparison of Task Partitioning Schemes, Chapter 6: Characterization of Other Parameters on Performance, Chapter 7: Conclusion, References, Appendix, Index

Scott Whitman

Reviews for Multiprocessor Methods for Computer Graphics Rendering

This is both a complete literary history and an exemplary exercise in modern science studies, tracing how a particular science works over the generations to incorporate new technologies, create paradigm shifts, and understand the universe a little more accurately. By combining these in one study, Markley clarifies a great deal about the poorly understood but very important relationships between science, literature, culture, and reality. He also gives us all the latest news from Mars, which keeps getting more interesting. It's a fascinating story, and Markley is the first to tell it. --Kim Stanley Robinson Dying Planet is a work of meticulous scholarship documenting the scientific controversies and literary representations of Mars from the early Renaissance to the present. Its comprehensiveness will make it a valuable resource for literary scholars, cultural critics, and scientists interested in the cultural history of this fascinating world. --N. Katherine Hayles, author of My Mother Was a Computer: Digital Subjects and Literary Texts In Robert Markley's wonderfully nuanced reading of the red planet's cultural history, Mars is a liminal world caught between death and life. The 20th century's favourite site for interplanetary science fiction has a lot to say about our relationship with technology and our own planet. Ever since H.G.Wells's War of the Worlds (1898), Mars has imposed the ecological constraints of a dying planet on the imaginations of writers and readers . The astronomer Percival Lowell described it as a cold, arid world and argued that Earth was going the way of Mars . Ever since Mars has become a warning of what might await our own planet: to imagine gazing across the Martian landscape in 1905 and 2005 is to confront the possibilit y that one is looking ... at the future of the human species. Markley's admirable aim is to show that the discourses and practices of science cannot be hermetically sealed from their sociocultural environment ... this is a masterly exploration of the interplanetary sublime .--THE GUARDIAN, 5 November 2005 [A] compact, well detailed synopsis of the science and a insightful critique of the literature to provide an in-depth resource for understand how Mars impinges on our human psyche. --Mark Mortimer,Universe Today Markley writes about Mars as a knowledgeable outsider, weaving in cultural history and science fiction... [T]here are many historical, literary, political, and cultural nuggets... --David Grinspoon, Scientific American Dying Planet is a must read for all Martians and Marsophiles. --Thomas J. Morrissey, SFRA Review [E]xtraordinarily well argued and well researched... Especially strong is Markley's cogent discussion of the culturally contingent nature of scientific knowledge; especially valuable to sci-fi literary study is his comprehensive coverage of 20th-century science fiction concerning Mars, from the work of H.G. Wells et al. to Kim Stanley Robinson's monumental Mars trilogy. This is a unique and invaluable work. Essential. --R. J. Cirasa, Choice [S]cholarly and meticulous; a valuable resource. --David A. Hardy, Popular Astronomy Dying Planet is an excellent and detailed book. For anyone seeking to understand the fascinating intertwined histories of science and science fiction, and how a ball of rock, just six thousand seven hundred kilometres in diameter and several tens of millions of kilometres away, has exerted such an astonishing influence on our imaginations, it will be well worth reading. --Charles S. Cockell, Interdisciplinary Science Reviews Dying Planet is an excellent and detailed book. For anyone seeking to understand the fascinating intertwined histories of science and science fiction ... it will be well worth reading. --Interdisciplinary Science Reviews 2006


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