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AMD chipsets logo. This is an overview of chipsets sold under the AMD brand, manufactured before May 2004 by the company itself, before the adoption of open platform approach as well as chipsets manufactured by ATI Technologies after October 2006 as the completion of the ATI acquisition.
82340SX PC AT - announced in January 1990, it is the Topcat chipset licensed from VLSI. [17] 82340DX PC AT - announced in January 1990, it is the Topcat chipset licensed from VLSI. [17] 82350 EISA - announced in September 1988. [18] [14] This chipset supports the i486 microprocessor. It was expected to be available in the later half of 1989. [16]
Many major PC vendors agreed to use this technology in Skylake-based laptops; however, no laptops were released with the technology as of 2019. [60] [61] The integrated GPU of Skylake's S variant supports on Windows DirectX 12 Feature Level 12_1, OpenGL 4.6 with latest Windows 10 driver update [62] (OpenGL 4.5 on Linux [63]) and OpenCL 3
The vast majority of Intel server chips of the Xeon E3, Xeon E5, and Xeon E7 product lines support VT-d. The first—and least powerful—Xeon to support VT-d was the E5502 launched Q1'09 with two cores at 1.86 GHz on a 45 nm process. [2]
A case's motherboard and power supply unit (PSU) form factor must all match, though some smaller form factor motherboards of the same family will fit larger cases. For example, an ATX case will usually accommodate a microATX motherboard. Laptop computers generally use highly integrated, miniaturized, and customized motherboards.
The actual key depends on specific hardware. The settings key is most often Delete (Acer, ASRock, Asus PC, ECS, Gigabyte, MSI, Zotac) and F2 (Asus motherboard, Dell, Lenovo laptop, Origin PC, Samsung, Toshiba), but it can also be F1 (Lenovo desktop) and F10 . [50] Features present in the BIOS setup utility typically include:
LGA 1151, [1] also known as Socket H4, is a type of zero insertion force flip-chip land grid array (LGA) socket for Intel desktop processors which comes in two distinct versions: the first revision which supports both Intel's Skylake [2] and Kaby Lake CPUs, and the second revision which supports Coffee Lake CPUs exclusively.
In 1983, Clarkson College of Technology (now Clarkson University) became the first college in the nation to give each incoming freshman a personal computer. The model issued to them was the Z-100. [7] [8] [9] In 1986, the US Air Force awarded Zenith Data Systems a $242 million ($571 million in 2023) contract for 90,000 Z-100 desktop computers. [10]