Hello Professor Cem, Thank you so much for these videos. I am a masters student specializing in computer graphics and wanted to know if the slides for your course CS 6620 - Ray Tracing in Graphics are available somewhere? I'm pretty sure the videos aren't available but it would be awesome if the slides are accessible. I am currently working on a Ray Tracer and feel like they would be of huge help for me right now. I like the way you explain things. Thank you!
@@cem_yuksel No worries! I'm currently following Peter Shirley's ray tracing in one weekend which is written really well. Keep making awesome videos :) There's a chance I might apply for a Phd at University of Utah some time in future.
Hello professor. Thanks for these amazing videos. I'm a undergraduate student trying to learn about computer graphics through these videos. I would like to know, when can we expect the upcoming videos. These are very informative and covers most of the upthinking ideas. So, I was thinking to follow this videos till the end to get a proper idea on the topic in the pipelined manner. Again thanks for these videos
Curves are curves. The "infinitely many, infinitely small line segments" idea is calculus. We render curves as many short (i.e. a finite number of, not infinitely small) line segments on the GPU, simply because GPUs don't have curve primitives. Otherwise, it is possible to render curves as curves with a software renderer.
6:00 Isnät he look like duck? Legs. Because it was duckling - water creature. Bri-an J. Fo-rd "Aqu-atic cre-atures" here on TH-cam. Then Ne-al Ad-ams "Exp-an-ding Ear-th", cant even write corretly such comments are automatically rem-oved by YT. Enjoy
always learning something new I keep on grinding those lectures :D
This was great. I've tried understanding triangle strips before but it never made sense until now.
Amazing Lecture. You explain it so well. Thank you so much!
Hello Professor Cem, Thank you so much for these videos. I am a masters student specializing in computer graphics and wanted to know if the slides for your course CS 6620 - Ray Tracing in Graphics are available somewhere? I'm pretty sure the videos aren't available but it would be awesome if the slides are accessible. I am currently working on a Ray Tracer and feel like they would be of huge help for me right now. I like the way you explain things. Thank you!
Unfortunately, no. I have no recorded lectures or slides for CS 6620.
@@cem_yuksel No worries! I'm currently following Peter Shirley's ray tracing in one weekend which is written really well. Keep making awesome videos :) There's a chance I might apply for a Phd at University of Utah some time in future.
It's really nice video sessions, is that possible we get the slides anywhere from your website?
Hello professor. Thanks for these amazing videos. I'm a undergraduate student trying to learn about computer graphics through these videos. I would like to know, when can we expect the upcoming videos. These are very informative and covers most of the upthinking ideas. So, I was thinking to follow this videos till the end to get a proper idea on the topic in the pipelined manner. Again thanks for these videos
I'm happy to hear that. The next lecture will be up very soon.
even a curve itself is really not a curve, right? isn't it made of infinitely many, infinitely small line segments?
btw thanks a lot for this lecture!
Curves are curves. The "infinitely many, infinitely small line segments" idea is calculus. We render curves as many short (i.e. a finite number of, not infinitely small) line segments on the GPU, simply because GPUs don't have curve primitives. Otherwise, it is possible to render curves as curves with a software renderer.
6:00 Isnät he look like duck? Legs. Because it was duckling - water creature. Bri-an J. Fo-rd "Aqu-atic cre-atures" here on TH-cam. Then Ne-al Ad-ams "Exp-an-ding Ear-th", cant even write corretly such comments are automatically rem-oved by YT. Enjoy