What the fuck Pug? I haven't been hostile or extreme in the least. I offered my take on the technology, nothing more. At this point it's little more than a nice little party trick because nobody's *done* anything with it. How is that extreme or hostile or anything other than my opinion? And who was even arguing? My initial statement could be summed up as "I wouldn't worry about it" re: W7RE's concerns, and everything that followed was an explanation since my intent was misconstrued as condescending when it wasn't meant to be. I know I can be a bit abrasive because I'm a jackass, but shit.
Anyway...
I had forgotten about nvidia offering the tech to other people. I haven't followed any of this super closely because (as mentioned) there hasn't been any real reason to. I'm certainly not saying that physics stuff isn't really cool at times, or that it isn't going anywhere, as I'm quite sure physics stuff will continue to increase its prominence in design just as it has for years now, and maybe it'll even be PhysX as an entity that does something amazing in the future... but PhysX itself doesn't seem to be making waves right now. My reaction isn't extreme, it's a statement of the reality of the situation. Thus far PhysX just hasn't done anything other than a few cool effects in a few games that have, by and large, not convinced people that they really need to care. I could be utterly wrong and that could change in ways I don't anticipate, but I'm just stating the way I see the situation.
I had forgotten Pug's recently-posted info, and maybe I should have been more specific in the above posts, but I didn't think I needed to be. At the time of the comments, I was mostly thinking that I didn't see PhysX as a threat because by the time anyone did anything really interesting with it specifically (if anyone ever truly did), likely there would be competing and comparable solutions that would essentially do the same thing (just like graphics cards basically do the same thing with varying degrees of performance, etc.), or some similar option would have won out and been included in all the products readily vailable to buy. And if other people do end up adopting it, then... well, that's basically what I was saying. Then support will grow, developer interest will spark creative design, and it'll go somewhere. Which would be great for everybody. So maybe that'll happen. That's the wider adoption Pug was talking about, but at the time of 3DFX and the 4xFSAA offered by the Voodoo5 5500 (which I owned), the Voodoo cards had a huge following and, at the same time, the company was about to have their creditors initiate bankruptcy proceedings eventually leading to a buyout by nvidia. That was a bit of a different case with a variety of factors that led to the widespread acceptance of the tech. And again, that's something more fundamental that can be used in many circumstances, where so far PhysX is more developmentally specific in scope.