- Jan 16, 2001
- 31,528
- 3
- 76
Yo, At. 
In my office, I'm known as "the hardware geek." I'm the guy with the info on building PCs. OK, whatever.
I was asked today "What does DirectX do?" I answered that it was Microsoft's interface b/t the operating system and the multimedia hardware, such as video and sound cards.
I was then asked, "But isn't that what the driver does?"
<--me was
/head explodes <--it did
We all know that a driver is a piece of software that tells a piece of hardware how it works, what it's limits are, how to communicate w/the OS, etc.
So, this begs the question: What IS the difference b/t DirectX and a driver (say for a video card)?
Is it that the DRIVER is device specific and DX is OS specific?
In my office, I'm known as "the hardware geek." I'm the guy with the info on building PCs. OK, whatever.
I was asked today "What does DirectX do?" I answered that it was Microsoft's interface b/t the operating system and the multimedia hardware, such as video and sound cards.
I was then asked, "But isn't that what the driver does?"
/head explodes <--it did
We all know that a driver is a piece of software that tells a piece of hardware how it works, what it's limits are, how to communicate w/the OS, etc.
So, this begs the question: What IS the difference b/t DirectX and a driver (say for a video card)?
Is it that the DRIVER is device specific and DX is OS specific?
