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The Indigo, introduced as the IRIS Indigo, is a line of workstation computers developed and manufactured by Silicon Graphics, Inc. (SGI). SGI first announced the system in July 1991. SGI first announced the system in July 1991.
Iris Xe Max [72] 2021 Mobile DG1: 4905 300 1650 Iris Xe Pod Desktop 4906 GPU SG-18M Server 4907 Iris Xe Graphics Desktop 4908 UHD Graphics 710 2021 Desktop Alder Lake: Celeron G6900. Celeron G6900T. 4693 128:16:2 300 1300 76.8 Pentium Gold G7400. Pentium Gold G7400T 1350 UHD Graphics 730 i3-12100. i3-12100T 4692 192:24:3 300 1400 i3-12300. i3 ...
Xe-LP is the low power variant of the Xe architecture with removed support for FP64. [22] Xe-LP is present as integrated graphics for 11th-generation Intel Core and the Iris Xe MAX mobile dedicated GPU (codenamed DG1), [6] as well as in the H3C XG310 Intel Server GPU (codenamed SG1). [4]
The Pentium G3258 CPU is unlocked despite not having the K-suffix. S – performance-optimized lifestyle (low power with 65 W TDP) T – power-optimized lifestyle (ultra low power with 35–45 W TDP) R – BGA packaging / High-performance GPU (Iris Pro 5200 (GT3e)) X – extreme edition (adjustable CPU ratio with no ratio limit)
Atom is a system on a chip (SoC) platform designed for smartphones and tablet computers, launched by Intel in 2012. [1] It is a continuation of the partnership announced by Intel and Google on September 13, 2011 to provide support for the Android operating system on Intel x86 processors. [2]
The Bluefield X cards are DPU-GPU hybrid cards with a 100 class Nvidia datacenter GPU integrated on the same PCB as the Bluefield DPU. These cards are intended for high power GPU clusters to allow high bandwidth communication without needing to cross the PCIe bus and create an unnecessary load on the CPU where performance may be better ...
A modern consumer graphics card: A Radeon RX 6900 XT from AMD. A graphics card (also called a video card, display card, graphics accelerator, graphics adapter, VGA card/VGA, video adapter, display adapter, or colloquially GPU) is a computer expansion card that generates a feed of graphics output to a display device such as a monitor.
The Indy, code-named "Guinness", is a low-end multimedia workstation introduced on July 12, 1993 by Silicon Graphics Incorporated (SGI). SGI developed, manufactured, and marketed Indy as the lowest end of its product line, for computer-aided design (CAD), desktop publishing, and multimedia markets.