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GeForce 9600 GT with cooler removed Asus Geforce 9600 GT Nvidia G94 GPU on a Geforce 9600 GT. On February 21, 2008, the GeForce 9600 GT was officially launched. It was an upgrade of 8600 GTS. 65 nm G94 GPU; 64 CUDA cores [8] 16 raster operation (ROP) units, 32 texture address (TA) / texture filter (TF) units; 20.8 Gtexels/s fill rate
Release Date Processors Supported Fabrication process FSB/HT Frequency (MHz) Memory PCI-Express SLI PCI USB PATA SATA LAN Sound Features Notes GeForce 9100M MCP77MH, MCP79MH 2008 Core2 Mobile, Celeron Mobile 65 nm 1066 MHz DDR3-1066 dual channel 2.0 20 lanes No 5 Ports 12 Ports Rev 2.0 No 4 Ports 3.0 Gbit/s 1000 Mbit/s HDA
Model – The marketing name for the processor, assigned by Nvidia. Launch – Date of release for the processor. Code name – The internal engineering codename for the processor (typically designated by an NVXY name and later GXY where X is the series number and Y is the schedule of the project for that generation).
Nvidia GeForce 210 ATI Radeon HD 4350 ATI Radeon HD 4550 ATI Radeon HD 4650 DDR3, 4 16 GB SFF, MT 2009 HP Pro 3005 [20] [21] Nvidia GeForce 9100 AMD Phenom II, Athlon 2, Sempron Socket AM3 Nvidia GeForce 9100 DDR3, 4 16 GB MT 2010 HP Pro 3010 [22] Intel G43/G45: Intel Core 2: LGA 775 Intel GMA X4500HD Nvidia GeForce 210 Nvidia GeForce GT 230
The GeForce 900 series is a family of graphics processing units developed by Nvidia, succeeding the GeForce 700 series and serving as the high-end introduction to the Maxwell microarchitecture, named after James Clerk Maxwell. They were produced with TSMC's 28 nm process.
The Mobility Radeon 9000 was the first DirectX 8 compliant GPU for notebook applications. It outperformed the nVidia GeForce 2 Go and was more feature-rich than the GeForce 4 Go, based on the GeForce 2 MX (NV11) and GeForce 4 MX (NV17), respectively, both of which were only DirectX 7 compliant. The Mobility Radeon 9000 shipped in laptops within ...
The Ada Lovelace architecture follows on from the Ampere architecture that was released in 2020. The Ada Lovelace architecture was announced by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang during a GTC 2022 keynote on September 20, 2022 with the architecture powering Nvidia's GPUs for gaming, workstations and datacenters.
GeForce 8 runs the various parts of its core at differing clock speeds (clock domains), similar to the operation of the previous GeForce 7 series GPUs. For example, the stream processors of GeForce 8800 GTX operate at a 1.35 GHz clock rate while the rest of the chip is operating at 575 MHz.