Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A Radeon HD 5450 by Sapphire Technology. Codenamed Cedar, [29] the Radeon HD 5400 series was announced on February 4, 2010, starting with the HD 5450. The Radeon HD 5450 has 80 stream cores, a core clock of 650 MHz, and 800 MHz DDR2 or DDR3 memory. The 5400 series is designed to assume a low-profile card size.
ATI Stream: 2007 Radeon HD 2900 XT RV670: 55 nm 10.1 11 (FL 10_1) ATI Stream APP [19] Radeon HD 3850/3870 RV770: 55 nm 40 nm 1.0 2008 Radeon HD 4850/4870 Evergreen: TeraScale 2: 40 nm 4.5 (Linux 4.2) [20] [21] [22] [c] 11 (FL 11_0) 1.2 2009 Radeon HD 5850/5870 Northern Islands: TeraScale 2 TeraScale 3: 2010 Radeon HD 6850/6870 Radeon HD 6950/ ...
AMD Software (formerly known as Radeon Software) is a device driver and utility software package for AMD's Radeon graphics cards and APUs. Its graphical user interface is built with Qt [ 6 ] and is compatible with 64-bit Windows and Linux distributions .
In Radeon HD 2900, it is a 1,024-bit bi-directional ring bus (512-bit read and 512-bit write), with 8 64-bit memory channels for a total bus width of 512-bits on the 2900 XT.; [9] in Radeon HD 3800, it is a 512-bit ring bus; in Radeon HD 2600 and HD 3600, it is a 256-bit ring bus; In Radeon HD 2400 and HD 3400, there is no ring bus.
AMD released the entry-level Radeon HD 6400 GPU on February 7, 2011. Codenamed Caicos, it came to market at the same time as the Radeon HD 6500/6600 Turks GPUs. The sole Caicos product, the Radeon HD 6450, aimed to replace the HD 5450. Compared to the 5450 it has double the stream processors, GDDR5 support, along with new Northern Island ...
A new Radeon HD driver was developed with the unofficial and indirect guidance of AMD open source engineers and currently exists in recent Haiku versions. The new Radeon HD driver supports native mode setting on R600 through Southern Islands GPU's.
Linux device drivers for AMD hardware in August 2016. AMD's proprietary driver, AMD Catalyst for their Radeon, is available for Microsoft Windows and Linux (formerly fglrx). A current version can be downloaded from AMD's site, and some Linux distributions contain it in their repositories.
Unified Video Decoder (UVD, previously called Universal Video Decoder) is the name given to AMD's dedicated video decoding ASIC.There are multiple versions implementing a multitude of video codecs, such as H.264 and VC-1.