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The Radeon RX 9000 series targets midrange performance and value rather than competing with Nvidia at the high-end like the Radeon RX 7000 series did. [6] This is a similar approach taken by the RX 5000 series in 2019. On January 8, 2025, reports surfaced that U.S. retailer B&H would begin pre-orders for the Radeon RX 9000 series on January 23 ...
The freeware version of Radeon RAMDisk software supports Windows Vista and later with minimum 4GiB memory, and supports maximum of 4GiB RAM disk [91] (6GiB if AMD Radeon Value, Entertainment, Performance Edition or Products installed, and Radeon RAMDisk is activated between 2012-10-10 and 2013-10-10 [92]). Retail version supports RAM disk size ...
The R300 GPU, introduced in August 2002 and developed by ATI Technologies, is its third generation of GPU used in Radeon graphics cards.This GPU features 3D acceleration based upon Direct3D 9.0 and OpenGL 2.0, a major improvement in features and performance compared to the preceding R200 design.
AMD Software (formerly known as Radeon Software) is a device driver and utility software package for AMD's Radeon graphics cards and APUs. Its graphical user interface is built with Qt [ 6 ] and is compatible with 64-bit Windows and Linux distributions .
Radeon HD 3410 May 7, 2009 RV610 65 180 85 PCIe 1.0 ×16 519 396 40:4:4 2.08 2.08 256 6.34 DDR2 64 41.52 — 20 No 10.0 3.3 No, Yes ? Radeon HD 3450 January 23, 2008 RV620 LE 55 181 67 PCIe 2.0 ×16 PCI AGP 8× 600 500 2.40 2.40 256 512 8.00 48.0 25 10.1 Radeon HD 3470 RV620 PRO PCIe 2.0 ×16 800 950 3.20 3.20 15.2 DDR2 GDDR3 64.0 30 Radeon HD 3550
ROCm is free, libre and open-source software (except the GPU firmware blobs [4]), and it is distributed under various licenses. ROCm initially stood for Radeon Open Compute platform; however, due to Open Compute being a registered trademark, ROCm is no longer an acronym — it is simply AMD's open-source stack designed for GPU compute.
The Mobility Radeon 9000 was launched in early summer 2002 and was the first DirectX 8 laptop chip. It outperformed the DirectX 7-based nVidia GeForce 2 Go and was more feature-rich than the GeForce 4 Go. A Mobility Radeon 9200 later followed as well, derived from the desktop 9200.
Unified Video Decoder (UVD, previously called Universal Video Decoder) is the name given to AMD's dedicated video decoding ASIC.There are multiple versions implementing a multitude of video codecs, such as H.264 and VC-1.