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Intel Active Management Technology (AMT) is hardware-based technology built into PCs with Intel vPro technology.AMT is designed to help sys-admins remotely manage and secure PCs out-of-band when PC power is off, the operating system (OS) is unavailable (hung, crashed, corrupted, missing), software management agents are missing, or hardware (such as a hard disk drive or memory) has failed.
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.
Nvidia offers nForce4 chipset driver downloads for NT-based Windows versions from 2000 up to and including Vista in the "Legacy" product type category on their download page. However, there is no official support for Windows 7 or newer, but Windows 7 has a built-in driver for the nForce 6 chipset, which is very similar.
[3] [4] [5] Profusion supported up to 32 GB of memory. It saw some limited competition from the NEC Aqua II chipset. [6] Another minor player in the eight-way space was Axil Computer's NX801, [2] which was used in an 8-way (two buses) Pentium Pro design, commercialized by Data General as their AV-8600 computer. [7]
no LVDS, Powerplay 7.0 AMD M690 chipset RS690M Radeon X1250 (350 MHz) DirectX 9.0, AVIVO, DVI/HDCP, no HDMI, Powerplay 7.0 AMD M690E chipset RS690T Athlon Neo, Mobile Sempron Radeon X1250 (350Mhz) No DirectX 9.0, AVIVO, 2× HDMI/HDCP, Powerplay 7.0 AMD M690T chipset Turion 64 X2, Athlon 64 X2 mobile: Radeon X1270 (400Mhz) DirectX 9.0, AVIVO ...
As of September 2010, the latest available driver revisions from the Intel website for Windows XP, Vista and 7 are: [66] [67] IEGD Version 5.1 for Windows NT,2000 and XP (OpenGL only) Version 3.3.0 for Windows XP. (D3D only) Version 4.0.2 for Windows Vista. Version 5.0.0.2030 for Windows 7.
ICH - 82801AA. The first version of the ICH was released in June 1999 along with the Intel 810 northbridge.While its predecessor, the PIIX, was connected to the northbridge through an internal PCI bus with a bandwidth of 133 MB/s, the ICH used a proprietary interface (called by Intel Hub Interface) that linked it to the northbridge through an 8-bit wide, 266 MB/s bus.
As fewer functions are left un-handled by the processor, chipset vendors have condensed the remaining northbridge and southbridge functions into a single chip. Intel's version of this is the "Platform Controller Hub" (PCH) while AMD's version was called Fusion Controller Hub (FCH). The PCH is still called a chipset. [5]