This Guy BUILT His Own Graphics Card!
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- čas přidán 17. 05. 2024
- Check out Paperlike at: paperlike.com/techquickie2405
Learn about Dylan Barrie's FuryGpu, a HOMEMADE GPU and graphics card!
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Thanks guys! Was a ton of fun sitting down and chatting with you for this!
Amazing work.
Really inspiring man well done!
Awesome
Berry superb work 😅 dude 😎 I am on my way to create my os just need some people on board
absolute mad man
gpu prices so high that this guy made his own
Lol
4 years of income for a single GPU? Sounds about right. Thanks Nvidia!
You obviously have no idea how much Xilinx FPGA development stuff costs
@@yaroslavpanych2067 he paied more that for off the shelf product all things custom what if it could render direct 3d y mean the arm x elite can
@@adriancoanda9227 "paied"
Derp.
I mean he demonstrated what Terry A. Davis did with TempleOS. One man CAN do things like this. HE IS A MAN OF FOCUS AND SHEER FUCKIN' WILL.
A John Wick you might say 👀
A driver for TempleOS
RIP Terry Davis. Got too powerful so the government had to take him out.
@@milasudril Actually, I think the most TempleOS way to drive this card would be to reprogram the card to exactly implement the TempleOS graphics primitives.
I wager one singular man can do a lot of things, long as there sheer will and commitment, time, and resources.
I´m an electrical engineer myself also designing and building boards. It´s very inspiring what the guy did. Thx for the motivation !
Really you are these engineers to build motherboard too well do you build server motherboard too .
as someone who had recently build their very first (almost) designed from scratch SBC with 80s hardware that guy is a magician
Wait!? So he’s actually running games on this thing? I thought it was going to be a super basic GPU that could technically render but only low resolution images in a very basic engine. I didn’t expect it to be running real games. He’s actually running Quake 2 at 720p? That is incredible. Great work brother. I’m so proud of this guy!
It is "basic", hence why he's using Quake II to demo it, as it's not a 3d accelerated game engine or have dynamic lighting, shaders, etc.... But even building a basic GPU like this is an insane display of skill, knowledge and intellect. Especially given all the trade secrets around GPU development and it doesn't seem like he's involved with one of the top 3
maybe with more hard work and dedication from this guy we can get annother competing brand of graphics cards in the future. may not be any time soon, but seeing people with the skill and intellect that this guy has gives me hope for the future.
@@jarsky idtech 1 add a 3D accelerated render as well, yes it has a software rendering path, to run on the CPU alone but it was updated by idSoftware to support a OpenGL render that is 3d accelerated and he used vulkan and a GPU, so he had to use the hardware render part.
But can it run Crysis?
But can it run DOOM?
@@devwing0 Doom could run on a potato, so probably yes.
Crysis uses DirectX 10, so no, it can't.
@@hammerth1421 🤓
What about Return To Castle Wolfenstein?
After doing all the hardware and software design and development…
How do you not register at a university … then write it up, “defend,” then get a “free” Ph.D. out of this?
because university certificates don't mean anything when you're independently...
He could be Doctor Honoris Causa in some places for his work.
@@xBintu I actually do not tend to think of university titles as having much meaning anyway. I generally view tech university titles as both a trophy and a certification of an “original contribution to knowledge;” in other words, a union card and perhaps a “license to learn.”
Because PhD requires original research and none of what this guy did would fall into that category probably. Maybe tricking the windows driver would qualify, but making a 1990s graphics card with already known render algorithms probably wouldn't.
@@baomao7243Well, you'd be wrong as my university education taught me a lot of things including FPGA design.
It bothers me a lot that people view university this way, especially when many of them probably didnt even go to university and just regurgitate what everyone else thinks.
Only GPU without spyware
Ohh good point, I'll duplicate the github and make drivers with spyware. Can't go missing that feature!
Dude has a big career at AMD, Nvidia, or Intel in the near future. Smart dude.
Edit: looks like he works at Respawn
lol he isn't a kid
or he can start his very own gpu company
@@smalltime0 who cares how old he is.
Thats extremly tuff, i mean even intel is struggling to make it.@@w4hid
@@matthewlozy1140i think he has 2 decades of experience as a software engineer. It doesnt mater how old he is but you wouldnt cal him a kid
He should add native support for Direct Draw, that'd make it great for RPG Maker games!
The modern GPUs don't support it?
@@RandMV FuryGPU doesnt tho
I recognise that screenshot.
Descent!
A fantastic game from the mid 90's. I spent a lot of time playing that (with the sound off) when I was supposed to be revising for my GCSEs.
Do you think that was Descent 2 or 3? It looked like 3 to me, but I do remember having Glide for Descent 2. Edit: Just double checked the watermark, and it is Descent 3. I always preferred 2.
@@kstarler
I had descent 1 at home, then bought 3 when I was at university a few years later. I'm assuming that screenshot was 2 as I recognised the HUD, but not the actual level being played.
Ah, yes. The original "DooM killer".
Now were taking about "diy" computer
Really cool that its a fpga! Fpga's are soo usefull they are litteraly the playground for chip designers and people who like making their own designs of chips and have the ability to erase/patch them without it being burned into the silicon. Fpga's are used to "emulate" old game console hardware for example if its dead or propiertary and are in some game consoles. They are even used in osciloscopes to do the processing and to hold most of the scope logic. Although it depends on what fpga you pick, they can be pretty expensive
Nice you showcased a homebrew passion project of one hobbyist. They need all exposure they can get.
Finally, these guy is getting recognized by bigger media. I hope someday, competition gets so high we come back to 1080 ti times of price to perfomance
900 and 1000 series cards really were special in terms of value for money
This will never happen as much as greedy these companies for the future AI!!!!! . Prices will increase since people who have money will buy.
@@weil46 A.I. is a joke.
If anything the crypto boom of 2020/2021 assured NVidia and even AMD that they can spit any inflamed number in your face and you'd eat it and happily buy the product.
@@QuackZack as i said the problem from the consumers, their will always be those who act with ego to buy whatever shit these companies make for any price.
I'm a little surprised he didn't take the Intel Larabee approach and use a software rasterizer without the FPGA... he really went above and beyond for this project. Very cool.
thank you guys for covering such a cool passion project! would love to see more coverage like this. would even like to see some interview footage if the person is comfortable with being on screen
The number of different skillsets and expertise this takes for one person to produce is just astounding and incredibly impressive. Dylan Barrie deserves so much recognition for such an accomplishment.
youtube glitched and all i heard was "he had to install over 4 capacitors" and i was damn that sounds about right
I like this format, it would be cool to see more of these. just deep diving to what other people are doing and making a short story
CZcams ban these pornbots
Noted. So in the next update, we will be innovating on the CZcams Desktop UI
@@kouhaiii3182😂😂 very good CZcams impersonation
I love this so much! You can learn to do anything if you are determined enough!
Awesome work by him 👏💯🎉
This is so impressive!
Does it run on TempleOS?
I wish he had opened sourced it, so if there's a company that would carry on his work, they would be obligated to open source their work, too.
That way, he could be an entry point for companies that wish to rival in the GPU industry
I think you're confusing open source and GPL.
I've had one of these paperwork films on my pad pro 2nd ed since day one. So 4 years. They are very good.
I wonder if this could be a good solution for classic PC gaming. It's pretty easy to find old CPU's, but old video cards are sometimes hard to come by if you're wanting a specific kind. With an FPGA, it could just be a matter of loading the correct configuration file and have the card re-program itself!
So cool to see a project I saw this guy developing in a small discord make it to here
Been a while since ive seen someone design a video circuit outside of 8 or 16 bit computing
Truly amazing project
more broadly, the Zync is an MPSoC -multiprocessor system on a chip: FPGA, ARM processors (usually several cores), and a few RTOS (real time operating system) cores. FPGAs are not persistent and need to be flashed/programmed every time they are powered up. this is where the ARM running LInux comes into play: as part of its boot sequence, it can run the software to flash the FPGA
This is cool! we been led to believe that only big companies can produce products like these. so good to see you can DIY graphic cards!
Honestly, it's not far off from the GeForce 256 from 1999. They didn't have the term GPU yet, so they called it a "single-chip processor with integrated transform, lighting, triangle setup/clipping, and rendering engines that is capable of processing a minimum of 10 million polygons per second".
Well done and great work!!
This is pretty cool. There is a guy(MNT Research)that did this for the Amiga a while back since Graphics cards for the Amiga platform are almost impossible to find and when you do they are over 1K US in most cases. He uses the same FPGA. I admire the brain power that goes into something like that. I also admire the brain power to tie shoes though. Where did my Sketcher slip-ins go?
It would be an amazing case studie for engineer students and the A+ would be given to the best fps/ electric consumption ratio on a specific bench for all the class.
It would be really great to see the zz9000 covered too, as I guess that was a similar engineering process, albeit with additional ARM cores and RAM.
This is such a blessing for tinkerers and a surprise! Many years ago, there was a seperate attempt in which the guy gave up. He documented everything. It didnt reach 3d gaming.
Theres a lot of lessons to be learned, and a potential uni project to graduate!
Wow, props to him for going the whole hog with this - closest I can get to doing some hands-on on electronics as an EE these days is knocking up the odd 555 timer circuit PCB 😂
Great video, you guys also mentioned limits of FPGA which is a real step up for this channel. Do you guys know if the Verilog is available? With that u could order an ASIC right? or is would that require silicon manufacturing that we no have
Dude builds his own graphics card.
Meanwhile, I celebrate not burning my pasta today…
We all have our own Everest to climb..some more than others 😁
@@elone3997 I just got stuck at the foot of my first one and some asshole left a big rock am supposed to push to the top, fml
You are describing my day job. I have 20 years of experience in FPGA programming. It's nice as a hobby project, with that he will certainly be hired as an FPGA developer.
(Not as GPU programmer for Nvidia or AMD, that's ASIC design and totally different ball game in the restrictness and procedure domain)
altho it makes sense he chose FPGA instead of ASIC here, because FPGAs can be reprogrammed while ASICs can only be replaced, and this is a prototype.
@@ThatJay283 Yes, totally. But the video makes it sounds that it is totally revolutionary and special. Everbody in my team should be able to pull the FPGA part. (The HW and SW part are handled by other teams)
Insert Jurassic Park 🏞️ meme about scientists thinking "could" instead of "should".
Except in this scenario the "should" is as certain as reality and the "could" is still unknown..
Can it run SGI Fusion?
Fair. Not every exercise in futility is a waste of time.
Picture this: an oppresive middle aged kingdom
the kingdom has many elites opressing peasants who are defenseless, they own the weapons after all they can do whatever they want
however one day peasants come up with idea of making pitchforks
the peasants while much weaker with crude farming tools as weapons can defend themselves to some degree
this is an analogy why making open source technology is not a waste of time
as companies slowly but surely start to get stingier and buying hardware for the regular consumer becomes less viable
an alternative on the way is always a good thing, "fine ill do it myself"
@@GoldenBeans I will admit that, while I'm not certain this is the white knight solution you're portraying it as, I will agree that the effort is less of a waste of time than I originally considered it to be. Touche`
5:01 "Acutal footage" 😂
But it is
Absolutely mad lad! Also, seeing Decent! reminded me I need to see if I can install that on the kid's computer.
He could make it open-source.
This dude deserves all the attention. It's so awesome to see this. Mind blown.
This needs more attention!!!
I want a longer video about this
fpgas are mostly for prototyping, if he really wanted to he could get a cpu made from the architecture he designed on the fpga
nvidia/intel/amd have the same work flow, they prototype architectures on fpgas and when they bench well they get the cpu/gpu made
I've been wanting to do something like this, but with either a modified risc-v based architecture, or something crazier like a custom implementation of non other than the 6502 architecture, then modify & optimize it for graphics proccessing to create my own custom gpu & it's respective architecture. Of course, I'm only going to be aiming for low powered devices such as, microcontrollers, custom retro style games consoles & handhelds, also old or retro computers in general as a starting point before my homebrew gpus can be taken any further.
Darn! He like did (almost?) everything from zero!
That is really impressive what one man could do!
Thanks for the video!
Some of FPGA devboards has HDMI output, right cooling, and almost looks like GPU but also have DIMM slots etc. but those usually cost 3-10 ke
sometimes i find myself thinking "what if every tech company went bankrupt and lost their tech". well, i guess we'd be okay. while we wouldn't recover immediately, i don't mind going back to 90's level tech to be honest.
This is EXTREMELY impressive. Especially the soldering part, holy shit
That’s wild I was thinking if anyone could do this a couple days ago!
Field Programmable Gatorade? Didn’t realize how far they’ve come in hydration beverage technology.
I’m a computer engineering major and I remember reading about if it was possible to literally make a CPU on your own, and the overwhelming consensus was that those sorts of projects are always industry level investments so I shouldn’t bother. I had assumed that’s also the case for GPUs, but this is telling me there’s hope!
He's using a FPGA so it's mostly board design and designing and coding the circuits in the fpga. However the retro community is making lots of efforts to replace and recreate older custom hardware. Like cpus and special chips. I've seen people working on custom 8088 and 286 cpus.
I also saw a video the other day of a guy trying to make an actual die, this was for a 16 pixel monochrome camera but the process is close enough to other types.
It seems like a lot is possible now with enough drive and some luck, and maybe some creative investment/modification in resources and equipment.
CPUs can be created now!
Bro that is crazy
Dear Techquickie Team, Thank you for this awesome roll-your-own GPU video. I thoroughly enjoyed all the technical details that were included. John M.
Go go Barrie
A lot of the tedium could be taken out of the soldering by using a Pick and Place machine.
maybe there's a future full of FOSS and Libre hardware :)
What a guy. 😱
The board took him one month?? What the!
That's frikkin insanely fast!
He is an absolute 100x guy
At this point someone is going to build gta6 before official release
He took "Fine, I'll do it myself" to the next level 🔥
Thats just brilliant
1:03 within cells interlinked
descent 3 might have been a popular request...
because it was not popular enough to get a source port like descent 1 and 2 were
shout out to DXX-rebirth
That guy have some good genes.
Nice job
I thought trace lengths were more about signal timing rather than signal integrity...
It can be said that timing is a part of signal integrity as there are several signals and they have to be processed in parallel. Now that's a bit frustrating as PCI-e uses serial data to avoid the problems that parallell signals have. But anyway you look at it the signals has to be available at the same time. Now signals traces can't be located immediately next to each other or there will be noise inducted in the neighboring traces. Same with the zigzag of traces to make them longer. Those can't be to tightly packed or there will be inductance generating ghosts of the signals in the same trace. As frequencies go up this just gets worse and worse. Even at pretty low frequencies this can cause problems if the traces are long enough. Once a long time ago I had to lengthen the ribbon cable between a POS terminal and it's keypad. Not particularly high frequencies here and decent voltages in the signals. And yet it was enough to occasionally corrupt the keypresses. Just split the cable into individual strands, bunched them upp a bit with zip ties and it worked every time. This was a temporary fix as the shop were going to replace their desks but at the time I had to make the keypad fit into an old pocket on the desk. It was an ugly hack but the customers couldn't see anything of it.
At the time I worked with component level repairs on a huge multinational computer company. I spent a lot of time studying signal integrity and I had loads of oscilloscopes almost always wired to something that didn't do exactly what it was supposed to do.
i thought you said field programmeable Gatorade
“I mean, you can, you’re just not gonna have a good time.” 😂 lmao Riley cracks me up
"Since you cant just insert a bare FPGA into a bare motherboard" When I was a kid I stuck a famicom cartridge into an ISA slot in my dad's PC. I don't know what I expected the outcome to be. The PC didnt turn on anymore afterwards.
The thing that makes me sad is there's enough computing power in a standard modern GPU that it could run its own operating system and be its own computer but these chip manufacturers don't seem to want that
At university I made a very simple gpu on a fpga evalboard as well. It was able to run a own version of pac man :D
There is also Ben Eater who has all kinds of shenanigans with low level hardware
5:00 "Acutal footage..." 8)
If someone told me that they would build their own GPU I'd say he/she was crazy, my man actually did it!
Amazing! Great to see! Thanks for sharing it.
I know FPGAs are incredible but I thought a GPU was impossible. I'm glad I was wrong
Graphic processing with FPGA's aren't really a new thing. There already exist several designs that emulates different Nintendo systems you can find online, and within specialized equipment it's used all the time for graphic processing
Well, an FPGA could be quite feasible as a base for implementing a GPU. All you need is tons of ALU:s, not many flip-flops. I guess that a performant CPU would be much more challenging, since it needs to keep much more state between instructions.
Acutal footage
Field Programmable Gatorade
It is an interesting idea, I was just searching for fpga and gpu. The problem is though he has spent several years making an early 90s gpu instead of just getting a 4090 or something. Realistically this would become useful if someone wanted to try to start optimizing a memory bus or something. Really if you want to start competing with the giants and it would need more effort. In a way ARC was doing that.
2:45 It doesn't have to, you can rebuild a 3D printer into a pick-and-place
5:00 minor spelling mistake
I may be interested for one on simple PCI to use it in a Pentium 3 that doesn't have AGP. With 128MB, Windows 2000, XP, maybe 98 drivers, and to perform similar with a FX-5600. I may be interested in buying one if really does the job in games of that period.
They reportedly made standard PCI(ie: not PCI Express, though they were also available) FX-5600 cards at the time, along with other fast(for the time) PCI cards.
You may get CPU limited anyway with these faster cards, though it may depend on your specific cpu.
Insane. Gonna make NVIDIA 2
Back in my day, FPGA meant flip-chip pin grid array.
My respect to him. Not everybody has this mind to do it.
Dude from preview looks like Anton Chigurh.
so, new code to emulate old hardware on old rigs for older games?
JDH and sammyuri would like a word
ATI Rage Fury
Would be pretty cool to get this pair with a RISC-V FPGA
i can't believe this man up and made a GPU using VHDL. amazing.
The design is entirely SystemVerilog, not VHDL! Despite its flaws, I strongly prefer SV to VHDL. Can't stand the painful verbosity of that language!
@@dbarrie ah! well that makes it marginally better! great job. I remember studying VHDL in uni and as verbose as it was, i quite enjoyed the low-levelness of it all
There was so much hate towards Linus and his projects (for only 1 real frak-up), but Tech quickie format and content is one of the best I've ever seen in this field. Grabbing interesting and useful stuff, explaining it for toddlers (let's be honest, guys, that's the only way we would understand anything) and making it short and fun too. Keep up the good work!
Linus would never expect his staff to prank him or optimize his disc drive,
He should build a commercial version and compete with big boys as fully open design free open source GPU
This makes it sound like that guy wasn't already an electical engineer. Add 4-7 years of college and/or industry experience, then yes, you too can do this at home.