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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.
List of VIA Nano microprocessors; References External links. Via C3 product page Archived 2007-05-02 at the Wayback Machine; Via C7 product page Archived 2007-04-19 ...
List of VIA chipsets This page was last edited on 29 July 2016, at 07:09 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ...
List of VIA chipsets This page was last edited on 14 July 2018, at 15:45 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
VIA Technologies chipsets (2 P) Pages in category "VIA Technologies" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total. ... This list may not reflect ...
Model Number Frequency L2-Cache Front Side Bus Multiplier Voltage TDP Socket Release Date Part Number(s) C7-D 1.5: 1500 MHz: 128 KiB: 400 MT/s: 15×: 1.084 V
VIA KT266A north bridge for Socket A A VIA USB PHY on a Rosewill-branded PCI USB 2.0 desktop expansion card VIA Vinyl Audio Envy24MT chip of a PCI sound card An IEEE 1394 FireWire-400 PCI card with the VIA VT6306 chipset. By the mid-1990s, VIA's business focused on integrated chipsets for the PC market. Among PC users then, VIA was best known ...
66, 100, and (on third-party chipsets) 133 MHz: Voltage range: 1.3 to 3.50 V: Processors: Pentium II: 233–450 MHz. Celeron: 266–433 MHz Pentium III: 450 MHz–1.13 GHz (A Slotket makes following Socket 370 CPUs usable: Celeron and Pentium III to 1,400 MHz, VIA Cyrix III: 350–733 MHz, VIA C3: 733–1,200 MHz