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Fabric Software Launches Fabric Engine 1.12

New performance heights reached with GPU compute, real-time rendering, and enhanced character tools.

Montreal -- Fabric Software announced version 1.12 of Fabric Engine, the development framework for high performance visual effects tools. The new version enables studios to easily harness the power of GPU computation and includes a new character tools API, as well as Splice Drawing, a highly customizable integrated real-time renderer.

“Performance and accessibility are at the heart of everything we do,” said Fabric Software CEO Paul Doyle. “With this release, we offer artists, TDs and R&D teams a huge step forward with GPU compute at zero cost, real-time rendering within their familiar DCC application, plus a host of character tools.”

GPU compute at zero cost – beta version

Using the graphics card (GPU) for computation can be extremely powerful but until now, it required specialized programming expertise and explicit coding for target hardware. In contrast, Fabric Engine enables TDs, as well as R&D engineers, to write code that can execute on both the GPU and the CPU with no additional coding required. It is then simply a matter of testing to see where it runs fastest. Zero cost experimentation means many more tools can be GPU-accelerated.

High performance real-time rendering inside the DCC application

Splice Rendering is a highly customizable real-time renderer that comes as part of the Fabric Engine integration with Autodesk’s Maya and Softimage. The performance gains are impressive compared with rendering within the host application alone. Performance tests included a Bullet simulation with 1500 instances and 4096 x 4096 textures that achieved 96 frames per second. Combined with Fabric’s work on the GPU, this means it is now possible to have multiple complex characters running at real-time directly within the regular DCC application.

Character tools API

Fabric now includes a character API with core building blocks for constructing high level character tools, including crowd simulation, scene assembly and real-time pre-visualization. Easy-to-use and extensible, it supports FBX and proprietary-format characters, plus integration with Splice Drawing for real-time rendering.

Source: Fabric Software

Jennifer Wolfe's picture

Formerly Editor-in-Chief of Animation World Network, Jennifer Wolfe has worked in the Media & Entertainment industry as a writer and PR professional since 2003.