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Intel graphics

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Accelerated Graphics Port
expansion bus
Intel HD Graphics
series of integrated graphics processors
Intel Arc
brand of graphics processing units by Intel
Intel i860
microprocessor
Intel GMA
trademark by Intel
Larrabee
canceled Intel chip microarchitecture for GPGPU
Intel740
thumb|A mainboard with Intel i740 thumb|Intel I740 4MB AGP complete in box thumb|A Intel740 PCI video card from Real3D The Intel740, or i740 (codenamed Auburn), is a 350 nm graphics processing unit using the Accelerated Graphics Port (AGP) interface, released by Intel on February 12, 1998. Intel was hoping to use the i740 to popularize AGP while most graphics vendors were still using PCI. Released to enormous fanfare, the i740 proved to have disappointing real-world performance, and sank from view after only a few months on the market. Some of its technology lived on in the form of Intel Extre
Intel Xe
family of GPU microarchitectures by Intel
Chips and Technologies
company
3Dlabs
3DLABS Inc. Ltd. was a fabless semiconductor company. It was founded by Yavuz Ahıska and Osman Kent in 1994 with headquarters in San Jose, California. It originally developed the GLINT and PERMEDIA high-end graphics chip technology that was used on many of the world's leading computer graphics cards in the CAD and DCC markets, including its own Wildcat and Oxygen cards.
Real3D
thumb|Real3D video card with Intel740 Real3D, Inc. was a maker of arcade graphics boards, a spin-off from Lockheed Martin. The company made several 3D hardware designs that were used by Sega, the most widely used being the graphics hardware in the Sega Model 2 and Model 3 arcade systems. A partnership with Intel and SGI led to the Intel740 graphics card, which was not successful in the market. Rapid changes in the marketplace led to the company being sold to Intel in 1999.
Intel 810
chipset by Intel
Comparison of Intel graphics processing units
Wikimedia list article
Intel 2700G
graphics co-processor unit