Short, Easy Dialogues
15 topics: 10 to 77 dialogues per topic, with audio
HOME – www.eslyes.com
Mike michaeleslATgmail.com
February 22, 2018: "500 Short Stories for Beginner-Intermediate," Vols. 1 and 2, for only 99 cents each! Buy both e‐books (1,000 short stories, iPhone and Android) at Amazon (Volume 1) and at Amazon (Volume 2). All 1,000 stories are also right here at eslyes at Link 10.
Originally written by Mark Kilgard in the early 1990s, the gears demo was created for UNIX systems (Linux, IRIX, Solaris) to demonstrate OpenGL capabilities. The appeal was its simplicity: a few dozen lines of code that produced a visually distinct, moving 3D object.
If you have ever peered into your Windows Task Manager, scrolled through a list of running processes, and spotted the cryptic filename wglgears.exe , you might have experienced a moment of panic. Is it a virus? Is it part of Windows? Why is it using a small percentage of your CPU? wglgears.exe
: Keep it, use it, or compile it. wglgears.exe is the little gear that never stops turning. Originally written by Mark Kilgard in the early
In the era of containerized apps and GPU passthrough, wglgears.exe has found new life inside Docker Windows containers and WSLg (Windows Subsystem for Linux GUI) – users regularly run it to confirm that libgl1 is correctly bridged. wglgears.exe is far more than a random process. It is a cultural artifact of graphics programming, a first responder for driver issues, and a litmus test for 3D acceleration on Windows. It cannot harm your system unless renamed and repurposed by malware, which is exceptionally rare. Is it a virus
The answer is far less sinister and far more technical. wglgears.exe is a classic, lightweight, and incredibly useful diagnostic tool for the world of computer graphics. It is the Windows version of the infamous gears demo that has been a staple of the OpenGL programming community for nearly three decades.