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V-Ray

 
Wikipedia: V-Ray
V-Ray
Developer(s) Chaos Group
Stable release 1.50.00 SP4 / 2009-10-26; 44 days ago
Operating system Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X
Type Rendering system
License Proprietary
Website Chaos Group
Folded paper: SketchUp drawing rendered using V-Ray
Render created using V-Ray for Rhinoceros 3D, demonstrating the advanced effects V-Ray is capable of.

V-Ray is a rendering engine that is used as an extension of certain 3D computer graphics software.

The core developers of V-Ray are Vladimir Koylazov and Peter Mitev of Chaos Software production studio established in 1997, based in Sofia, Bulgaria.

It is a rendering engine that uses advanced techniques, for example global illumination algorithms such as path tracing, photon mapping, irradiance maps and directly computed global illumination. The use of these techniques often makes it preferable to conventional renderers which are provided as standard with 3d software, and generally renders using these technique can appear more photo-realistic, as actual lighting effects are more realistically emulated.

V-Ray is used in the development of film productions and multi-million dollar game productions.

It is also used extensively in making realistic 3D renderings for architecture.

Contents

Compatibility

V-Ray is compatible with packages such as Sketchup, Autodesk 3ds Max, Maya, Rhino, TrueSpace, Maxon Cinema 4d,Blender and Softimage XSI, and is compatible with 32-bit and 64-bit architectures.

Versions

version year
1.50 RC1 ~2005
1.50 R1
1.50 RC2
1.50 R2
1.50 RC3
1.50 R3
1.50 RC5
1.50.00 Final
1.50 SP1
1.50 SP2
1.50 SP3
1.50 SP4
1.50 SP4a released (November 27th, 2009)

V-Ray and Autodesk 3ds Max

V-Ray is widely used as a rendering engine in substitution of the standard and mental ray renderers which are included bundled with 3ds Max.

V-Ray was later made compatible with the Autodesk's stripped down architectural-specific 3D CAD software Autodesk VIZ.

ASGVIS has developed V-Ray plugins for both McNeel's Rhinoceros and Google's SketchUp. Both are available on the PC, with Mac versions due in late 2009.

External links


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "V-Ray" Read more