Ok, I added the FPS text callback. If you svn up and re-make, you should see the number of frames per second the cloud/scene gets rendered on your machine. Cheers, Radu. -- http://pointclouds.org On 01/15/2011 07:50 PM, Ibrahim Awwal wrote: > Ah, I see what you mean. Yeah, it seems reasonable performance wise for the pcd viewer on the > table_scene_lms400_downsampled.pcd. table_scene_lms400.pcd (not downsampled) feels slightly jittery, but it's completely > responsive to my panning around. I couldn't test it on my own pcds from the PR2 because I haven't installed an updated > version of pcl on my home computer, but I'll try updating pcl and see whether that makes any difference. > > -Ibrahim Awwal > > > On 1/15/2011 7:34 PM, Radu Bogdan Rusu wrote: >> No I meant more along the lines of... can you try to load a PCD file using rosrun pcl_visualization pcd_viewer to see >> if it feels accelerated/fast? >> >> >> Cheers, >> Radu. >> -- >> http://pointclouds.org >> >> On 01/15/2011 07:33 PM, Ibrahim Awwal wrote: >>> Well currently, for some reason when I even try to run the Rviz configuration from >>> http://www.ros.org/wiki/kinect/Tutorials/Getting%20Started it doesn't even get started at all, which is really weird. It >>> just sort of hangs looking like this: http://hkn.eecs.berkeley.edu/~ibrahima/random/Screenshot-RViz.png >>> >>> The last time I ran it it eventually filled in the topics for the Point Cloud2 and Camera, but I still could not >>> interact with it at all. So maybe the issue is with something else? I installed the kinect package via the instructions >>> on http://www.ros.org/wiki/kinect . >>> >>> Previously with something else (trying to visualize a PR2) I was getting around 5 frames per second or less I believe, >>> which was pretty annoying to work with. >>> >>> -Ibrahim Awwal >>> >>> >>> On 1/15/2011 7:17 PM, Radu Bogdan Rusu wrote: >>>> Ibrahim, >>>> >>>> Just out of curiosity: are the PCL visualization accelerated on your machine? Can you render point clouds fast enough? >>>> (I'll add a FPS text to the visualizer later today). >>>> >>>> Cheers, >>>> Radu. >>>> -- >>>> http://pointclouds.org >>>> >>>> On 01/15/2011 07:14 PM, Ibrahim Awwal wrote: >>>>> Hi guys, >>>>> >>>>> I'm having a problem running Rviz on my computer, which is an Intel Core >>>>> i5 2.4Ghz with an on-die GPU (integrated, but decent spec considering >>>>> it's made by Intel). According to google results this is at least >>>>> comparable to older nVidia graphics cards, but I can barely run Rviz and >>>>> it's very laggy on Ubuntu 10.10 with everything up to date. I also am >>>>> trying to work with the Kinect and openNI but the visualizations that >>>>> use Rviz are just too slow, although the regular libfreenect examples >>>>> (eg. freenect-glpclview) work perfectly fine at full framerate. It seems >>>>> like OGRE3D doesn't like intel GPUs unfortunately, but I've noticed that >>>>> some people are doing things with Atom boards, so I'm wondering whether >>>>> anyone else is able to run Rviz on Intel GPUs. >>>>> >>>>> I'm considering getting a cheap Intel Atom dual-core + nVidia ION box >>>>> for developing if it's unlikely for Rviz to work at all on Intel GPUs. >>>>> Would this be good enough for basic development? Ideally I could try to >>>>> run any CPU intensive nodes on my Core i5 and just do the visualization >>>>> on the ION box. Does anyone have experience with Atom+ION computers and >>>>> Rviz? I really need a development computer so that I don't need to go >>>>> into the lab to do anything useful. Thanks! >>>>> >>>>> (Addendum: Rviz also doesn't like new Radeon graphics cards either, >>>>> which is unfortunate because I do have a desktop with a high end Radeon >>>>> card. So in general, am I stuck with nVidia for doing anything with >>>>> Rviz, or is anyone having success with non-nVidia cards?) >>>>>