OTOY unveils plans for OctaneRender 3

OTOY released Octane Render 1.1

OTOY Inc., a cloud graphic company, announced a massive upgrade across its entire product line with the announcement of OctaneRender 3 (production-ready GPU renderer), OctaneVR, OctaneRender Cloud services, and the open source ORBX media file format for HTML5, VR and AR platforms designed to provide artists with the most versatile suite of rendering technologies possible. OTOY’s Academy Award®-winning technology can be seen in the work of the leading visual effects studios, artists, animators, designers, architects, and engineers, giving the user unprecedented creative freedom, great levels of realism, and new ways in content creation and distribution powered by the cloud. OTOY also announced extended support for third-party applications through plugins,enabling seamless GPU-based, unbiased rendering in the most popular 2D and 3D graphics applications. Between the new supported third-party applications should belong Adobe Photoshop and also Pixologic’s Zbrush.

OctaneRender 3

According to OTOY the prepared release of OctaneRender 3 will transform the GPU renderer into a VFX juggernaut which will incorporates a wide range of emerging industry standards for GPU rendering, including Open Shader Language (OpenSL) and OpenVDB for particle simulation, and in the same time introducing new features never seen in any renderer availible on the market, including volumetric light field primitives and procedural microfacet displacement primitives. The new release of OctaneRender will  also supports a live and offline baking tool chain for game engines such as Unreal Engine 4 and Unity, and supports ‘one-click’ artist-driven publishing of simple, navigable baked scenes, and full cinematic content authoring for HTML5, VR and AR, using scripting nodes directly from apps such as 3DS Max, Maya and Adobe Photoshop. One of the most interesting features for use in real-time game engines is the Advanced live texture baking. OctaneRender 3 supports unbiased GPU texture baking (UV or volumetric) of global illumination, spherical harmonics and 8D light fields in Unreal Engine 4 and Unity plugins.

New features available in OctaneRender 3:

  • Volumetric rendering: OctaneRender 3 supports the ability to render particulate matter such as clouds, smoke, fog, and fire with varying densities and introduces a unique native primitive type for incredibly detailed micro-surface displacement volumes and surfaces required to render photorealistic natural and organic materials. Dreamworks’ OpenVDB is also supported for direct in-camera rendering of particle simulations.
  • Open Shader Language (OpenSL) support: Through OpenSL, content creators have the ability to build their own materials, procedural textures, and shaders, taking advantage of what is quickly becoming an industry standard while maintaining the exceptional performance OctaneRender is known for.
  • OpenCL support: OctaneRender 3 will support the broadest range of processors possible using OpenCL to run on Intel CPUs with support for out-of-core geometry, OpenCL FPGAs and ASICs, and AMD GPUs.
  • Deep pixel rendering: OctaneRender 3 adds deep pixel rendering support, as well as live connecting of DCC and compositing apps through Octane plug-ins for Pixologic’s Zbrush and The Foundry’s NUKE. OctaneRender 3 will also ship with a built in plugin for Adobe Photoshop that will properly handle multi-layer EXR files and support live deep pixel layer composting within Photoshop. Artists can open, create, and save ORBX media files introduced in OctaneRender 3, including planar and volumetric light fields, directly within Adobe Photoshop.
  • Infinite mesh and polygon sizes: OctaneRender 3 removes all limits on the maximum allowed primitive and triangle count.
  • FBX and PTEX support: OctaneRender 3 supports importing data from Autodesk’s FBX file format and Disney’s PTEX texture file format.
  • Split render passes, advanced per object reflection controls: OctaneRender 3 allows artists to split render passes into raw lighting and albedo passes, and adds fine-grained reflection, shadow and illumination casting controls per object or layer. These elements can also be built into the export, whether it is a light field, VR scene, or a movie file.
  • Fully configurable: OctaneRender 3 allows fully configurable UI, transform gizmos and dockable windows.

ORBX Media Format

OctaneRender 3 introduces the ORBX media format. The .ORBX file format was first available in OctaneRender 1.5 to enable rock-solid exchanging of scenes, materials, lighting and more, that could be imported into any supported OctaneRender plugin. Changes in the new ORBX media format will allows to perform similar function for rendered output, beyond EXR, with support for movies, audio, spectral render caching, light field caching, baked FBX caching, complete compositing and deep pixel metadata, and navigable scene controls without the need of sophisticated real-time engines. ORBX Media Format is the first of its kind container, containing pre-rendered data in the form of  light field render target caching for VR, AR and portal materials, supporting movie and audio formats.  Next to this, OTOY plans to open source the ORBX media format and make it available on GitHub in the moment OctaneRender 3 will be released.

Some of the new features:

  • Fully navigable: ORBX media files support web and mobile viewing of interactive content and texture baking directly from an Octane scene node, without the need or mastery of real-time game engines. Artists can bake their 3D scene for mobile, TV, VR, AR (light fields) and HTML5 playback.
  • Versatile rendering: The ORBX media format stores spectral film buffers allowing artists to pause and resume renders from disk.
  • ORBX Media Viewer: The first app that will support the ORBX media format will be the ORBX Media Viewer. The ORBX Media Player is already used for enjoying studio VR experiences such as the upcoming Batman: The Animated Series project OTOY is building with Warner Bros., or live streamed VR events like the hockey game OTOY recently produced in cooperation with the NHL. The ORBX Media Player will work with the Samsung GALAXY Gear VR, as well as Android-powered phones, tablets, and set-top boxes, with support for Microsoft HoloLens and HTML5 WebVR to come after launch.

OctaneRender Cloud

OTOY announced and previewed OctaneRender Cloud at SIGGRAPH 2014 as an feature enabling cloud-based content creation as well as advanced rendering and content distribution capabilities to complement standalone OctaneRender implementations. One of the ideas of the cloud is to support watermarking and pay wall authentication for web-based commercial content distribution and protection of IP of media created in OctaneRender.

Some of the new features:

  • Feature parity with OctaneRender 3: OctaneRender Cloud is built on the same codebase as OctaneRender 3.
  • Cloud-fueled rendering: orc.otoy.com will support unlimited, batched offline rendering jobs from ORBX scenes to produce images, animations, light fields, simple baked navigable ORBX media for ArchVis walkthroughs and asset browsing, full interactive scene export, packaging and deployment for VR and AR, all powered by Amazon Web Services, or OTOY’s own GPU clusters.
  • X.IO app integration: Applications that are built on OTOY’s X.IO App Streaming service will be connected to OctaneRender Cloud. OTOY’s real-time raytracing engine, Brigade, will be one of the first services leveraging the full scope of ORBX media exporting from OctaneRender, allowing artists to navigate scenes dynamically with no noise, and streamed to any device.

More information at: OTOY

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