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  2. ATI Technologies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ATI_Technologies

    The ATI Rage line powered almost the entire range of ATI graphics products. In particular, the Rage Pro was one of the first viable 2D-plus-3D alternatives to 3dfx 's 3D-only Voodoo chipset. 3D acceleration in the Rage line advanced from the basic functionality within the initial 3D Rage to a more advanced DirectX 6.0 accelerator in 1999 Rage 128 .

  3. Radeon 9000 series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radeon_9000_Series

    The R300 GPU, introduced in August 2002 and developed by ATI Technologies, is its third generation of GPU used in Radeon graphics cards. This GPU features 3D acceleration based upon Direct3D 9.0 and OpenGL 2.0, a major improvement in features and performance compared to the preceding R200 design. R300 was the first fully Direct3D 9-capable ...

  4. List of AMD graphics processing units - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_AMD_graphics...

    Launch – Date of release for the GPU. Architecture – The microarchitecture used by the GPU. Fab – Fabrication process. Average feature size of components of the GPU. Transistors – Number of transistors on the die. Die size – Physical surface area of the die. Core config – The layout of the graphics pipeline, in terms of functional ...

  5. Radeon R400 series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radeon_R400_Series

    The R420 GPU, developed by ATI Technologies, was the company's basis for its 3rd-generation DirectX 9.0/OpenGL 2.0-capable graphics cards. Used first on the Radeon X800, the R420 was produced on a 0.13 micrometer (130 nm) low-K photolithography process and used GDDR-3 memory. The chip was designed for AGP graphics cards.

  6. List of defunct graphics chips and card companies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_defunct_graphics...

    Amongst the notable discrete graphics card vendors, ATI Technologies — acquired by AMD in 2006 and since renamed to AMD — and NVIDIA are the only ones that have lasted. During 2022 Intel entered the discrete GPU market with the Arc series and has three more generations confirmed on two year release schedules.

  7. Radeon X1000 series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radeon_X1000_Series

    ATI released the successor to the R500 series with the R600 series on May 14, 2007. ATI does not provide official support for any X1000 series cards for Windows 8 or Windows 10; the last AMD Catalyst for this generation is the 10.2 from 2010 up to Windows 7. [1] AMD stopped providing drivers for Windows 7 for this series in 2015. [2]

  8. Radeon HD 2000 series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radeon_HD_2000_series

    It was the first to implement a digital PWM on board (7-phase PWM), first to use an 8-pin PEG connector, and was the first graphics card from ATI to support DirectX 10. The Radeon HD 2900 Pro was clocked lower at 600 MHz core and 800 MHz memory (1,600 MHz effective), configured with 512 MB of GDDR3 or 1 GB of GDDR4.

  9. Radeon R300 series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radeon_R300_Series

    A ATI Mobility Radeon 9000 GPU. ATI had held the lead for a while with the Radeon 8500 but Nvidia retook the performance crown with the launch of the GeForce 4 Ti line. A new high-end refresh part, the 8500XT (R250) was supposedly in the works, ready to compete against NVIDIA's high-end offerings, particularly the top line Ti 4600.