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An earlier chipset support for Intel 8085 microprocessor can be found at MCS-85 family section. Early IBM XT-compatible mainboards did not yet have a chipset, but relied instead on a collection of discrete TTL chips by Intel: [1] the 8284 clock generator; the 8288 bus controller; the 8254 programmable interval timer; the 8255 parallel I/O interface
AMD chipsets logo. This is an overview of chipsets sold under the AMD brand, manufactured before May 2004 by the company itself, before the adoption of open platform approach as well as chipsets manufactured by ATI Technologies after October 2006 as the completion of the ATI acquisition.
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]
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Chipset Code name Device ID [3] RAMDAC clock Pixel pipelines Shader model (vertex/pixel) API support Memory bandwidth DVMT Hardware acceleration Direct3D OpenGL OpenCL MPEG-2 VC-1 AVC; i740 1998 Desktop stand-alone Auburn 7800 220 1 3.0 (SW) / No 5.0 1.1 No 0.8 2–8 Optional external MPEG-2 decoder via Video Module Interface No No i752 1999
The chipset was based on technology developed by the Corollary company, which Intel acquired. [2] It supported up to 8 Pentium III Xeon processors on two busses and maintained cache coherency between them. [3] [4] [5] Profusion supported up to 32 GB of memory. It saw some limited competition from the NEC Aqua II chipset. [6]
Have a glance and see if you can spot the minor differences in aesthetics. (Photo: Yahoo Gaming SEA) Even when it comes to internals, features like the the power delivery remains similar.
The vast majority of Intel server chips of the Xeon E3, Xeon E5, and Xeon E7 product lines support VT-d. The first—and least powerful—Xeon to support VT-d was the E5502 launched Q1'09 with two cores at 1.86 GHz on a 45 nm process. [2]