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Microsoft XCPU, codenamed Xenon, is a CPU used in the Xbox 360 game console, to be used with ATI's Xenos graphics chip. The processor was developed by Microsoft and IBM under the IBM chip program codenamed "Waternoose", which was named after the Monsters, Inc. character Henry J. Waternoose III . [ 1 ]
Xenon is a 1988 vertical scrolling shooter video game, the first developed by The Bitmap Brothers, and published by Melbourne House which was then owned by Mastertronic. It was featured as a play-by-phone game on the Saturday-morning kids' show Get Fresh .
Xenon 2: Megablast is a 1989 shoot 'em up video game developed by The Bitmap Brothers and published by Image Works for the Amiga and Atari ST. It was later converted to the Master System , PC-98 , X68000 , Mega Drive , Commodore CDTV , Game Boy , Acorn Archimedes and Atari Jaguar platforms.
Xenon (Microsoft Xbox 360) – Three core PPE-based, 1 MB shared L2 cache, VMX128, 3.2 GHz; Nintendo. Gekko (GameCube) – 750CXe core with special enhancements, 486 ...
The TeraScale microarchitecture is based on this chip, the shader units are organized in three SIMD groups with 16 processors per group, for a total of 48 processors. Each of these processors is composed of a 5-wide vector unit (total 5 FP32 ALUs), resulting in 240 units, that can serially execute up to two instructions per cycle (a multiply and an addition).
Xenon Xbox 360: Successor to the original Xbox. [202] Durango Xbox One: Successor to Xbox 360. [203] Edmonton Xbox One S Xbox One with 4K and HEVC Support. [204] Scorpio Xbox One X: Upgrade to Xbox One, announced at Electronic Entertainment Expo 2016. Announced to have 6 TFLOPS GPU and 8-core CPU. [205] Scarlett Xbox Series X|S
The company entered the video game industry in 1988 with the scrolling shooter Xenon. They quickly followed with Speedball . Prior to becoming the publisher of their own games (under Renegade Software ), early Bitmap Brothers titles were distributed by Image Works and Konami .
The Xeon brand has been maintained over several generations of IA-32 and x86-64 processors. The P6-based models added the Xeon moniker to the end of the name of their corresponding desktop processor, but all models since 2001 used the name Xeon on its own.