- published: 15 Oct 2020
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The GeForce 200 Series is the 10th generation of Nvidia's GeForce graphics processing units, still based on the Tesla (microarchitecture) (GT-codenamed chips), named after the inventor and physicist Nikola Tesla.
The GeForce 200 Series introduces Nvidia's second generation of Tesla (microarchitecture), Nvidia's unified shader architecture; the first major update to it since introduced with the GeForce 8 Series.
The GeForce GTX 280 and GTX 260 are based on the same processor core. During the manufacturing process, GTX chips are binned and separated through defect testing of the core's logic functionality. Those that fail to meet the GTX 280 hardware specification are re-tested and binned as GTX 260 (which is specified with fewer stream processors, less ROPs and a narrower memory bus).
In late 2008, Nvidia re-released the GTX 260 with 216 stream processors, up from 192. Effectively, there were two GTX 260 cards in production with non-trivial performance differences.
The GeForce 9 series is the ninth generation of NVIDIA's GeForce series of graphics processing units, the first of which was released on February 21, 2008. Products are based on a slightly repolished Tesla microarchitecture, adding PCIe 2.0 support, improved color and z-compression, and built on a 65 nm process, later using 55 nm process to reduce power consumption and die size (GeForce 8 G8x GPUs only supported PCIe 1.1 and were built on 90 nm process or 80 nm process).
On May 1, 2008 the GeForce 9300 GS was officially launched.
The GeForce 7 Series is the seventh generation of Nvidia's GeForce graphics processing units. This was the last series available on AGP cards. Adobe Flash Player, however, supports hardware acceleration of H.264 video starting with the GeForce 8 Series on Windows. Thus, no Nvidia GPUs are supported for hardware acceleration of Flash video on AGP-based hardware (even though the 7 Series has hardware acceleration for H.264 as a built-in feature and is available to other video players).
The following features are common to all models in the GeForce 7 series except the GeForce 7100, which lacks GCAA:
The 7100 series was introduced on August 30, 2006 and is based on GeForce 6200 Series architecture. This series supports only PCI Express interface. Only one model, the 7100 GS, is available.
Features
The 7100 series supports all of the standard features common to the GeForce 7 Series provided it is using the ForceWare 91.47 driver or later releases, though it lacks opencl/CUDA support, and its implementation of Intellisample 4.0 lacks GCAA.
The GeForce 8 Series is the eighth generation of NVIDIA's GeForce line of graphics processing units. The third major GPU architecture developed by Nvidia, Tesla (microarchitecture) represents the company's first unified shader architecture.
All GeForce 8 Series products are based on Tesla (microarchitecture).
Dual Dual-link DVI Support: Able to drive two flat-panel displays up to 2560×1600 resolution. Available on select GeForce 8800 and 8600 GPUs.
One Dual-link DVI Support: Able to drive one flat-panel display up to 2560×1600 resolution. Available on select GeForce 8500 GPUs and GeForce 8400 GS cards based on the G98.
One Single-link DVI Support: Able to drive one flat-panel display up to 1920×1200 resolution. Available on select GeForce 8400 GPUs. GeForce 8400 GS cards based on the G86 only support single-link DVI.
The GeForce 8 series supports 10-bit per channel display output, up from 8-bit on previous NVIDIA cards. This potentially allows higher fidelity color representation and separation on capable displays. The GeForce 8 series, like its recent predecessors, also supports Scalable Link Interface (SLI) for multiple installed cards to act as one via an SLI Bridge, so long as they are of similar architecture.
http://www.geekshive.com Features: - HDCP ready for viewing High Definition movie content - NVIDIA Unified Architecture with GigaThread technology - Full Microsoft DirectX 10 Shadow Model 4.0 support - Lumenex engine - 16x full-screen anti-aliasing - Built for Microsoft Windows Vista and Windows Media Center - NVIDIA Quantum Effects physics processing technology - Dual-link DVI output supporting resolution up to 2560x1600 resolution - PCI Express 2.0 support - 128-bit High Dynamic-Range Rendering Specifications: - Bus Type: PCI-E 2.0 - GPU Clock: 550MHz - Memory Bus: 64 - Memory Type: DDR2 - Memory Size: 512 MB - Memory Speed: 800MHz - Thermal Solution: HEATSINK - Minimum Power: 350 - Outputs: VGA, , HDTV, , Dual-Link DVI - Card Dimensions: 6.9 x 4.676 x 0.75 - Package Contents: S-Video...
From/De: Nvidia [Oct.20.2008] The new NVIDIA GeForce 9-Series motherboard GPUs feature: • 16-cores for processing DirectX 10 games and CUDA-accelerated applications • High-quality video playback with NVIDIA PureVideo® HD technology, which offloads 100% of all video processing from the CPU to the GPU • Support for advanced audio and video connectivity, including uncompressed LPCM 7.1 audio, dual-link DVI, and HDMI • Support for NVIDIA Hybrid SLI Technology, which boosts performance up to 70% above the motherboard GPU • Single-chip design with much smaller footprint than competing chipsets makes it ideal for small form factor and ultra-slim media center PCs Motherboards featuring GeForce 9-Series motherboard GPUs are shipping this month from industry-leading motherboard partners i...
nVidia Geforce 9 Series Exclusive Preview presented by Keplaffintech™
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The GeForce 200 Series is the 10th generation of Nvidia's GeForce graphics processing units, still based on the Tesla (microarchitecture) (GT-codenamed chips), named after the inventor and physicist Nikola Tesla.
The GeForce 200 Series introduces Nvidia's second generation of Tesla (microarchitecture), Nvidia's unified shader architecture; the first major update to it since introduced with the GeForce 8 Series.
The GeForce GTX 280 and GTX 260 are based on the same processor core. During the manufacturing process, GTX chips are binned and separated through defect testing of the core's logic functionality. Those that fail to meet the GTX 280 hardware specification are re-tested and binned as GTX 260 (which is specified with fewer stream processors, less ROPs and a narrower memory bus).
In late 2008, Nvidia re-released the GTX 260 with 216 stream processors, up from 192. Effectively, there were two GTX 260 cards in production with non-trivial performance differences.
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