Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Intel Xe expands upon the microarchitectural overhaul introduced in Gen 11 with a full refactor of the instruction set architecture. [19] [4] While Xe is a family of architectures, each variant has significant differences from each other as these are made with their targets in mind.
New OpenCL driver is Mesa RustiCL and this driver written in new language Rust is OpenCL 3.0 conformant for Intel XE Graphics with Mesa 22.3. Intel Broadwell and higher will be also conformant to 3.0 with many 2.x features. For Intel Ivy Bridge and Haswell target is OpenCL 1.2. Actual development state is available in mesamatrix. NEO compute ...
As of September 2010, the latest available driver revisions from the Intel website for Windows XP, Vista and 7 are: [66] [67] IEGD Version 5.1 for Windows NT,2000 and XP (OpenGL only) Version 3.3.0 for Windows XP. (D3D only) Version 4.0.2 for Windows Vista. Version 5.0.0.2030 for Windows 7.
Intel Fortran Composer XE 2013 SP1 Update 1 (compiler 14.0.1) October 18, 2013: Japanese localization of 14.0; Windows 8.1 and Xcode 5.0 support Intel Fortran Composer XE 2015 (compiler 15.0) August 5, 2014: Full support for Fortran 2003; BLOCK from Fortran 2008; EXECUTE_COMMAND_LINE from Fortran 2008; New optimization report annotates the ...
Intel Parallel Studio XE was a software development product developed by Intel that facilitated native code development on Windows, macOS and Linux in C++ and Fortran for parallel computing. [2] Parallel programming enables software programs to take advantage of multi-core processors from Intel and other processor vendors.
The Intel-based MacBook Pro is a discontinued line of Macintosh notebook computers sold by Apple Inc. from 2006 to 2021. It was the higher-end model of the MacBook family, sitting above the low-end plastic MacBook and the ultra-portable MacBook Air, and was sold with 13-inch to 17-inch screens.
An example of an Intel Upgrade Card. The Intel Upgrade Service was a relatively short-lived and controversial program of Intel that allowed some low-end processors to have additional features unlocked by paying a fee and obtaining an activation code that was then entered in a software program, which ran on Windows 7.
SoC peripherals include 24× USB (10× 3.0, 14× 2.0), 14× SATA 3.0, 4× Integrated 10 GbE LAN (except D-2191), UART, GPIO, and 32 lanes of PCI Express 3.0 in ×16, ×8 and ×4 configurations. Support for up to 8 DIMMs of DDR4 memory, up to 64 GB per DIMM (512 GB).