Contested deletion

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This page is not unambiguously promotional, because... it's completely devoid of marketing or promotional language. I am striving to just describe the technology, plain and simple, and to create useful cross references.

I am still fleshing this out and was hopeful that the Wikipedia community would jump in and help out. Perhaps that's naive of me, being this is my first page I've created.

I am meeting with a few folks that are experts on this technology and will flesh it out more tomorrow.

Apologies that I apparently pushed this out prematurely. Once I had done this I received an on-screen notification that there were over 900 articles ahead of me and that it might take 2 months to get approved. That we're here discussing this 3 hours later is, well, eye-brow raising.

Again, I will complete this tomorrow (if not this evening!)

-- Popoki 🐱🐱 chat 00:51, 22 May 2018 (UTC)Reply

Comment

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It appears that you submitted a stub draft to AFC for review before it was ready for review. Once a draft is submitted for review, it may be considered in no particular order, but should be ready for review. The time to ask for help from the community is either before the draft is submitted for review or after the article is in a state that can stand on its own. However, based on your statement, I am removing the deletion tag, but am leaving the tag in place that it is not suitable for Wikipedia. Robert McClenon (talk) 01:13, 22 May 2018 (UTC)Reply

Conflict with Nvidia RTX and page name

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This draft has some Wikipedia issues I will work on. It needs to be made to link to and fit in with other articles. As far as the page name this may be better. Let's give it a bit of touching up then we can look at moving it to article space. —DIYeditor (talk) 15:43, 21 August 2018 (UTC)Reply

There is a problem with some promotional-sounding language. I will try to incorporate more neutral phrasing. —DIYeditor (talk) 15:49, 21 August 2018 (UTC)Reply

I have moved the text to RTX (ray tracing platform) and continued work there. Let's edit at that location. —DIYeditor (talk) 16:01, 21 August 2018 (UTC)Reply

  • In future you should move the draft into mainspace rather than starting a new page. I had the two drafts history merged to this article. — Frayæ (Talk/Spjall) 09:45, 22 August 2018 (UTC)Reply
    • ? I requested the merge[1]. I had started a page (Nvidia RTX) before I realized the draft existed. I wasn't planning on keeping much of the text from this draft when I found out about it because it sounded promotional and had pretty clearly been prepared by someone associated with Nvidia. I did prefer the page name (at the time, not sure why) to the one I had created so I moved that to the better page name. Afterward I decided his draft's text was salvageable but it was too late to move it in its entirety. Originally I was just going to take a few pieces of it. —DIYeditor (talk) 10:44, 22 August 2018 (UTC)Reply

Requested move 22 August 2018

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The following is a closed discussion of a requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. Editors desiring to contest the closing decision should consider a move review. No further edits should be made to this section.

The result of the move request was: moved as requested per the discussion below. Dekimasuよ! 20:49, 29 August 2018 (UTC)Reply


RTX (ray tracing platform)Nvidia RTX – Consistency with the other Nvidia technology articles such as Nvidia GameWorks and Nvidia PhysX - all others are in that format. —DIYeditor (talk) 06:42, 22 August 2018 (UTC) --Relisting. Dreamy Jazz 🎷 talk to me | my contributions 20:22, 29 August 2018 (UTC)Reply


The above discussion is preserved as an archive of a requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on this talk page or in a move review. No further edits should be made to this section.
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  Prior content in this article duplicated one or more previously published sources. The material was copied from: https://devblogs.nvidia.com/introduction-nvidia-rtx-directx-ray-tracing/, https://developer.nvidia.com/rtx/raytracing and http://highperformancegraphics.org/previous/www_2009/presentations/nvidia-rt.pdf. Copied or closely paraphrased material has been rewritten or removed and must not be restored, unless it is duly released under a compatible license. (For more information, please see "using copyrighted works from others" if you are not the copyright holder of this material, or "donating copyrighted materials" if you are.)

For legal reasons, we cannot accept copyrighted text or images borrowed from other web sites or published material; such additions will be deleted. Contributors may use copyrighted publications as a source of information, and, if allowed under fair use, may copy sentences and phrases, provided they are included in quotation marks and referenced properly. The material may also be rewritten, providing it does not infringe on the copyright of the original or plagiarize from that source. Therefore, such paraphrased portions must provide their source. Please see our guideline on non-free text for how to properly implement limited quotations of copyrighted text. Wikipedia takes copyright violations very seriously, and persistent violators will be blocked from editing. While we appreciate contributions, we must require all contributors to understand and comply with these policies. Thank you. Justlettersandnumbers (talk) 15:58, 28 October 2018 (UTC)Reply

Vulkan support information outdated

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This article says that Vulkan support is under development, with a link to the by now old article "Walton, Jarred. "Nvidia talks ray tracing and Volta hardware". PC Gamer. Retrieved March 19, 2018." As of now, Turing Vulkan and OpenGL extensions for ray tracing do exist as explained here: https://developer.nvidia.com/vulkan-turing.

May I edit the article and correct this?

--Jadnohra (talk) 20:30, 8 February 2019 (UTC)Reply

Yeah be WP:BOLD. —DIYeditor (talk) 08:20, 9 February 2019 (UTC)Reply

Acronym

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RTX is obviously an acronym. However, no description of the acronym is provided. What does RTX stand for?

Should the article mention the GeForce RTX 20 series and GeForce RTX 30 series?

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It seems that the GeForce RTX 20 and 30 series are mentioned as a disambiguation at the top of the article. Why is this and why are they not related to this article? Should the article mention the GeForce RTX 20 series and GeForce RTX 30 series? Alexysun (talk) 19:40, 27 February 2022 (UTC)Reply

Not seeing any reliable sources coming up for purported acronym

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I just reverted an edit by User:ElimiNate117 which added a citation to what appears to be a personal blog for the notion that RTX is an acronym for Ray Tracing Texel eXtreme. If you search on Google for that, all that comes up are blogs and forums. There is nothing from Nvidia or the computer industry trade press (PC Magazine, PCWorld, PC Gamer, Maximum PC, CNET, etc.) which claims that RTX stands for that acronym. So this appears to be a backronym situation in which someone made it up. I also just searched ProQuest (which is very good at capturing all kinds of indiscriminate press releases and corporate puffery) and there are no results on there for that phrase. In contrast, Google and ProQuest reveal that a real acronym like CUDA has lots of reliable sources showing that Nvidia originally intended CUDA to be an acronym for "Compute Unified Device Architecture." Coolcaesar (talk) 16:49, 12 September 2023 (UTC)Reply

Just traced it. The purported acronym for RTX was added in this edit by User:Xenroxiver on 29 November 2021 with no sources. That editor has a tendency to make unsourced edits of questionable quality, many of which have already been reverted. It looks like the editor may have injected something they made up into Wikipedia as a prank and then the made-up acronym was picked up by various forums and blogs. --Coolcaesar (talk) 16:52, 12 September 2023 (UTC)Reply