I saw an interesting link today on harmony-central:
http://www.harmony-central.com/Newp/2004/BionicFX-AVEX.html
This company is using the processing power of NVIDIA cards to do convolution reverb. Apparently, some of these 3d accelerators are much more powerful than the computer's CPU. I wonder if this could be applied to MIR as well? It might be a more economical solution than using a second processor (not that I claim any knowledge as to the specific requirements of MIR.)
http://www.harmony-central.com/Newp/2004/BionicFX-AVEX.html
This company is using the processing power of NVIDIA cards to do convolution reverb. Apparently, some of these 3d accelerators are much more powerful than the computer's CPU. I wonder if this could be applied to MIR as well? It might be a more economical solution than using a second processor (not that I claim any knowledge as to the specific requirements of MIR.)