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NewWave is a discontinued object-oriented graphical desktop environment and office productivity tool for PCs running early versions of Microsoft Windows (beginning with 2.0). It was developed by Hewlett-Packard and introduced commercially in 1988. [1] It was used on the HP Vectras and other IBM-compatible PCs running Windows.
The HP Brio was a line of business-oriented desktop personal computers made by Hewlett-Packard aimed at small businesses. The 7000 series was targeted at mainstream business computing, and started with a street price of $2449, inclusive of a 15-inch monitor. The 8000 was designed for "power-hungry" business users.
Arm Ltd. (sells designs only) Amazon (AWS Graviton is ARM-based); Apple Inc. (ARM-based CPUs) Broadcom Inc. (ARM-based, e.g. for Raspberry Pi) Fujitsu (its ARM-based CPU used in top supercomputer, still also sells its SPARC-based servers)
The ProLiant line of servers was then acquired by Hewlett Packard Enterprise in 2015 after HP split up into two separate companies. Despite the ProLiant name being used on some of these entry-level servers listed below, they are based on HP's former NetServer line of servers from 1993–2002 (more specifically the tc series) and as such do not ...
HP Pavilion is a line of consumer-oriented personal computers originally produced by Hewlett-Packard and later by its successor, HP Inc. Introduced in 1995, HP has used the name for both desktops and laptops for home and home office use.
HP dx2250 [10] ATI Radeon Xpress 1150 AMD Athlon 64 X2, Athlon 64, Sempron: Socket AM2 ATI Radeon Xpress 1150 ATI Radeon X1300 DDR2, 2 4 GB MT 2007 HP dx2280 [11] Intel 945G Intel Core 2, Pentium D, Pentium 4 LGA 775 Intel GMA 950 DDR2, 4 4 GB MT HP dx2300 [12] Intel 946GZ Intel Core 2, Pentium D, Pentium 4 LGA 775 Intel GMA 3000 ATI Radeon X1300
The Saturn hardware is a nibble serial design [4] as opposed to its Nut predecessor, which was bit-serial. [5] Internally, the Saturn CPU has four 4-bit data buses that allow for nearly 1-cycle per nibble performance with one or two buses acting as a source and one or two acting as a destination. [4]
VIA chipsets support CPUs from Intel, AMD (e.g. the Athlon 64) and VIA themselves (e.g. the VIA C3 or C7).They support CPUs as old as the i386 in the early 1990s. In the early 2000s, their chipsets began to offer on-chip graphics support from VIA's joint venture with S3 Graphics beginning in 2001; this support continued into the early 2010s, with the release of the VX11H in August 2012.