Nicole Scott of Netbook News is on the ground for us again and this time she is at NVIDIA's GPU Technology Conference in San Jose.
The next stop was at an NVIDIA demo station where we were shown a real-time rendered beating heart and just how it can be used in hospitals in the future to assist doctors to help patients with heart related issues in potentially a quicker and more accurate fashion.
Not only are would be doctors who implement this software able to measure and see real-time heart density data and blood flow, but using NVIDIA 3D Vision stereo technology, the doctors would be able to see it in 3D. It was mentioned in the video that this type of rendering has been possible in the past, but just one frame would take too long to render, hence making the technology pretty useless in a practical sense. In the video above, we see many thousands of particles moving around the heart and they indicate blood flow. Of course being an NVIDIA sponsored event, the video card GPU used to make this tech possible is a Quadro 6000.
Pretty incredible technology on display here. I think I would like my doctor to have access to this sort of real-time data if something were to happen to me. How about you?
What's in Cameron's PC?
- CPU: Intel Core i7 13700KF
- MOTHERBOARD: ASRock Z790 Taichi
- RAM: TEAM DDR5-7200 32GB
- GPU: Inno3D iChill GeForce RTX 4090
- SSD: Samsung 990 Pro 2TB
- OS: Windows 11 Pro
- COOLER: Corsair iCUE H150i ELITE CAPELLIX XT
- CASE: Corsair iCUE 5000X RGB
- PSU: Corsair HX1000i
- KEYBOARD: Corsair K70 RGB
- MOUSE: Corsair M55 Pro RGB
- MONITOR: Samsung Odyssey OLED G8 34-inch Ultrawide
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