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GeForce 200 series. Nvidia GeForce GTX 295 released in January 2009; the flagship unit of the 200 series. This particular model manufactured by NVIDIA board-partner, Inno3D. The GeForce 200 series is a series of Tesla -based GeForce graphics processing units developed by Nvidia.
Driver-Side Only Limited GeForce 6150 No No No ... 210 127 PCIe 1.0 x16 450 900 400 1.8 ... GeForce 210 No No Yes GeForce GT 220 GeForce GT 240
GeForce is a brand of graphics processing units (GPUs) designed by Nvidia and marketed for the performance market. As of the GeForce 40 series, there have been eighteen iterations of the design. The first GeForce products were discrete GPUs designed for add-on graphics boards, intended for the high-margin PC gaming market, and later ...
Nvidia PureVideo. PureVideo is Nvidia 's hardware SIP core that performs video decoding. PureVideo is integrated into some of the Nvidia GPUs, and it supports hardware decoding of multiple video codec standards: MPEG-2, VC-1, H.264, HEVC, and AV1. PureVideo occupies a considerable amount of a GPU's die area and should not be confused with ...
Nvidia NVENC. Nvidia NVENC (short for Nvidia Encoder) [1] is a feature in Nvidia graphics cards that performs video encoding, offloading this compute-intensive task from the CPU to a dedicated part of the GPU. It was introduced with the Kepler -based GeForce 600 series in March 2012 (GT 610, GT620 and GT630 is Fermi Architecture). [2][3]
GeForce 600 series. Support status. Unsupported. The GeForce 500 series is a series of graphics processing units developed by Nvidia, as a refresh of the Fermi based GeForce 400 series. It was first released on November 9, 2010 with the GeForce GTX 580. Its direct competitor was AMD 's Radeon HD 6000 series; they were launched approximately a ...
GeForce 8 series. GeForce 8800 Ultra released in May 2007; the series' flagship unit. The GeForce 8 series is the eighth generation of Nvidia 's GeForce line of graphics processing units. The third major GPU architecture developed by Nvidia, Tesla represents the company's first unified shader architecture. [1][2]
On November 27, 2009, Nvidia released its first GeForce 300 series video card, the GeForce 310. However, this card is a re-brand of one of Nvidia's older models (the GeForce 210) and not based on the newer Fermi architecture. [1] On February 2, 2010, Nvidia announced the release of the GeForce GT 320, GT 330 and GT 340, available to OEMs only. [2]