Any professional series 3D graphics card, such as an nVidia Quadro or an ATI FirePro, should work. How beefy a card depends largely on how many users will need to share it.
On 9/11/11 2:09 PM, Kevin Van Workum wrote: > Hello, > > I'm working on setting up a server to use for running OpenGL > applications remotely. It seems that VirtualGL + TurboVNC would be a > good solution. Do you have an suggestions for a graphics card? > > I'd prefer to stick with my current OS, Centos 5, but could possibly > move to Centos 6 or Fedora 15 if needed. > > Thanks. > > -- > Kevin Van Workum, PhD > Sabalcore Computing Inc. > Run your code on 500 processors. > Sign up for a free trial account. > www.sabalcore.com <http://www.sabalcore.com> > 877-492-8027 ext. 11 > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Using storage to extend the benefits of virtualization and iSCSI > Virtualization increases hardware utilization and delivers a new level of > agility. Learn what those decisions are and how to modernize your storage > and backup environments for virtualization. > http://www.accelacomm.com/jaw/sfnl/114/51434361/ > > > > _______________________________________________ > VirtualGL-Users mailing list > VirtualGL-Users@lists.sourceforge.net > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/virtualgl-users ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Doing More with Less: The Next Generation Virtual Desktop What are the key obstacles that have prevented many mid-market businesses from deploying virtual desktops? How do next-generation virtual desktops provide companies an easier-to-deploy, easier-to-manage and more affordable virtual desktop model.http://www.accelacomm.com/jaw/sfnl/114/51426474/ _______________________________________________ VirtualGL-Users mailing list VirtualGL-Users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/virtualgl-users