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Matrox Mystique (4 MB) with Rainbow Runner Video and Rainbow Runner TV add-on cards Die shot of a Matrox Mystique MGA1064SG graphics chips. The Mystique was a 64-bit 2D GUI and video accelerator (MGA1064SG) with 3D acceleration support. Mystique has "Matrox Simple Interface" (MSI) rendering API. It was one of many early products by add-in ...
Composite artifact colors is a technique commonly used to address several graphic modes of some 1970s and 1980s home computers. With some machines, when connected to an NTSC TV or monitor over composite video outputs, the video signal encoding allowed for extra colors to be displayed, by manipulating the pixel position on screen, not being ...
Many other graphics card manufacturers that offered hardware for Amiga and compatible systems also used it. Introduced in 1995 with the CyberVision64 graphics card (Phase5), CyberGraphX was the first RTG software to allow full true-colour screens for Workbench and applications—older solutions supported only 256 colours (e.g. Picasso) or a ...
Matrox Graphics, Inc. is a producer of video card components and equipment for personal computers and workstations. Based in Dorval , Quebec , Canada, it was founded in 1976 by Lorne Trottier and Branko Matić.
The Atari ST series has a digital-to-analog converter of 3-bits, eight levels per RGB channel, featuring a 9-bit RGB palette (512 colors).Depending on the (proprietary) monitor type attached, it displays one of the 320×200, 16-colors and 640×200, 4-colors modes with the color monitor, or the high resolution 640×400 black and white mode with the monochrome monitor.
IBM 8514 is a graphics card manufactured by IBM and introduced with the IBM PS/2 line of personal computers in 1987. It supports a display resolution of 1024 × 768 pixels with 256 colors at 43.5 Hz (), or 640 × 480 at 60 Hz (non-interlaced).
Simulation of ZX Spectrum graphics output on a PAL TV set. The original ZX Spectrum computer produces a one bit per pixel, bitmapped colour graphics video output. A composite video signal is generated through an RF modulator, and was designed for use with contemporary 1980s television sets.
Playdom, Inc. was an online social network game developer popular on Facebook, Google+ and Myspace.The company was founded in the San Francisco Bay Area [2] by University of California, Berkeley graduates Ling Xiao and Chris Wang and Swarthmore College graduate Dan Yue.