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The Radeon R100 is the first generation of Radeon graphics chips from ATI Technologies.The line features 3D acceleration based upon Direct3D 7.0 and OpenGL 1.3, and all but the entry-level versions offloading host geometry calculations to a hardware transform and lighting (T&L) engine, a major improvement in features and performance compared to the preceding Rage design.
The R100 cards were originally launched without any numbering as Radeon SDR, DDR, LE and VE; these products were later "rebranded" to their names within the numbered naming scheme, when the Radeon 8000 series was introduced.
AMD K5: SSA/5, 5k86 1 No 75–133 50, 60, 66 FSB 8+16 0 Socket 5 Socket 7: discrete: K6 350, 250 AMD K6: Model 6, Littlefoot 1 No 166–300 50, 60, 66 FSB 32+32 0 Socket 7: discrete: MMX + MMX: 250, 180 AMD K6-2: Chomper, Chomper Extended, mobile 166–550 66, 95, 97, 100 FSB 32+32 0, 128 Super Socket 7: MMX, 3DNow! + 3DNow! 250, 180 K6-3 ...
The Radeon, first introduced in 2000, was ATI's first graphics processor to be fully DirectX 7 compliant. R100 brought with it large gains in bandwidth and fill-rate efficiency through the new HyperZ technology. The RV200 was a die-shrink of the former R100 with some core logic tweaks for clockspeed, introduced in 2002.
Llano AMD Fusion (K10 cores + Redwood-class GPU) (launch Q2 2011, this is the first AMD APU) uses Socket FM1 Bulldozer architecture; Bulldozer, Piledriver, Steamroller, Excavator (2011–2017) [ edit ]
Integrated custom ARM Cortex-A5 co-processor [45] with TrustZone Security Extensions [46] in select APU models, except the Performance APU models. [47] Select models support Hybrid Graphics technology by using a Radeon R7 240 or R7 250 discrete graphics card. [48] Display controller: AMD Eyefinity 2, 4K Ultra HD support, DisplayPort 1.2 Support ...
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In 2007, AMD added the AMD Athlon, AMD Turion, and Mobile AMD Sempron processors to its embedded product line. Leveraging the same 64-bit instruction set and Direct Connect Architecture as the AMD Opteron but at lower power levels, these processors were well suited to a variety of traditional embedded applications.