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List of graphics chips and card companies

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

During the 1980s and 1990s, a relatively large number of companies appeared selling primarily 2D graphics cards and later 3D. Most of those companies have subsequently disappeared, as the increasing complexity of GPUs substantially increased research and development costs. Many of these companies subsequently went bankrupt or were bought out. Amongst the notable discrete graphics card vendors, AMD and Nvidia are the only ones that have lasted. In 2022, Intel entered the discrete GPU market with the Arc series and has three more generations confirmed on two year release schedules.

There are currently 102 manufacturers in this incomplete list.

Graphics chip makers

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Many of the companies listed below also design(ed) graphics cards.

Name Country of origin Year of market entry Year of market exit Fate Notes
3dfx United States 1994 2001 Bankruptcy; acquired by Nvidia in 2002
3Dlabs United States 1994 2009 Merged with Creative Labs' personal entertainment division to form ZiiLABS
ALi Taiwan 1987 2006 Acquired by Nvidia Formerly a division of Acer, full name Acer Laboratories Incorporated
Alphamosaic United Kingdom 2000 2004 Acquired by Broadcom Original developers of the VideoCore series of discrete mobile GPUs[1]
AMD United States 2006 Active Current developers of the Radeon series; entered graphics chip industry after acquiring ATI Technologies in 2006
ARK Logic United States 1993 1999 Bankruptcy
Arm Holdings United Kingdom 2005 Active Developers of the Mail and Immortalis lines of mobile GPUs
ArtX United States 1997 2000 Acquired by ATI Technologies
ATI Technologies Canada 1985 2006 Acquired by AMD Pioneering company, developers of the Wonder, the Mach, the Rage, the All-in-Wonder, and finally the Radeon series of graphics cards
Avance Logic United States 1991 2002 Acquired by Realtek in 1995; dissolved in 2002
BitBoys Finland 1991 2009 Acquired by ATI Technologies
Broadcom United States 2004 Active Current developers of the VideoCore series; entered graphics chip industry after acquiring Alphamosaic in 2004
Chips and Technologies United States 1984 1997 Acquired by Intel
Chromatic Research United States 1993 1998 Acquired by ATI Technologies
Cirrus Logic United States 1984 2005 Spun off graphics chip division to create Magnum Semiconductor, which was acquired by IDT in 2017
Evans & Sutherland United States 1968 2001 Sold its graphics chip assets to Real Vision Still active in the computer simulation business[2]
Gemini Technology Canada 1984 1990 Bankruptcy; acquired by Seiko Epson to form the Vancouver Design Center
Genoa Systems United States 1984 2002 Bankruptcy
GigaPixel United States 1997 2000 Acquired by 3dfx
Headland Technology United States 1989 1993 Sold its graphics chip assets to Spea Software Formerly a division of LSI Logic's Standard Products Group
Imagination Technologies United Kingdom 1985 Active Founded as VideoLogic; developers of the PowerVR series
Integrated Information Technology United States 1987 Un­known Exited the graphics chip industry Following exit became 8x8, a provider of videoconferencing and VoIP products
Intel United States 1982 Active Entered the graphics chip industry after becoming the second source for NEC's μPD7220 in 1982; entered the discrete GPU market with the Arc series in 2022
iXMicro United States 1994 2000 Bankruptcy Produced graphics cards for Macintosh and Macintosh clones
Jingjia Micro China 2006 Active China's largest producer of GPUs
Matrox Canada 1976 Un­known Exited the graphics chip industry Once a mass manufacturer of graphics chips, now targets niche markets; still produces graphics cards based on Intel's Arc GPUs
Moore Threads China 2020 Active Developers of the MTT series, China's first domestically produced graphics card[3]
MOS Technology United States 1979 2000 Dissolution Produced the VIC and TED lines of graphics chips; owned by Commodore International
NEC Japan 1979 Un­known Exited the graphics chip industry Produced the influential μPD7220, widely used in 1980s microcomputers
NeoMagic United States 1993 Active Supplier of mobile SoCs with integrated GPUs
Number Nine Visual Technology United States 1982 1999 Acquired by S3 Developed the first 128-bit graphics processor
Nvidia United States 1993 Active Developers of the GeForce series; largest producer of discrete desktop graphics chips as of 2023[4]
Oak Technology United States 1987 2003 Acquired by Zoran
OPTi United States 1993 2001 Dissolution Entered the graphics chip industry after acquiring MediaChips in 1993
Paradise Systems United States 1982 1996 Dissolution Acquired by Western Digital in 1986, then sold to Philips in 1995
Primus Technology United States 1992 1993 Disappeared from the marketplace Produced a Windows accelerator by the name P2000[5]
Qualcomm United States 2008 Active Developers of the Adreno series
Radius United States 1986 2002 Acquired by Media 100 Produced graphics solutions primarily for Apple Computer
Raycer United States 1996 1999 Acquired by Apple Computer
Real3D United States 1995 1999 Acquired by Intel
Realtek Taiwan 1995 Un­known Exited the graphics chip industry
Rendition United States 1993 1998 Acquired by Micron Technology
S3 Graphics United States 1989 2000 Merged with Diamond Multimedia, then sold off its core graphics division to VIA Technologies; later sold off to HTC
Samsung Electronics South Korea 2022 Active Began employing AMD's RDNA GPU microarchitecture into their Exynos SoCs in 2022
Silicon Graphics United States 1981 2006 Stopped developing graphics chips in-house in 2006 and started buying GPUs from other companies Later went completely defunct in 2009; its assets were bought in the resulting Chapter 11 bankruptcy by Rackable Systems, which changed its name to Silicon Graphics International
Silicon Image United States 1995 2015 Acquired by Lattice Semiconductor
Silicon Integrated Systems Taiwan 1997 2003 Spun off graphics chip division to form XGI
Tamarack Microelectronics Taiwan 1987 2002 Merged with IC Plus in 2002
Texas Instruments United States 1979 Un­known Exited the graphics chip industry
Trident Microsystems United States 1987 2003 Sold its graphics chip assets to XGI in 2003 Following exit entered bankruptcy in 2012
Tseng Labs United States 1983 1998 Sold its graphics chip assets to ATI Technologies in 1997
United Microelectronics Corporation Taiwan 1980 Un­known Exited the graphics chip industry Following exit in the late 1990s became a chip foundry
VIA Technologies Taiwan 1999 2011 Exited the graphics chip industry Entered the graphics chip industry after forming a joint venture with S3[6][7]
Video Seven United States 1984 1989 Merged with G-2 Inc., a subsidiary of LSI Logic, to form Headland Technology
Vivante Corporation United States 2004 2015 Acquired by VeriSilicon
Weitek United States 1991 1996 Bankruptcy Producer of the Power9000 series of GPUs from circa 1991 to 1994
Western Digital Imaging United States 1986 1995 Dissolution Formed as the result of merger between Paradise Systems and Verticom Inc.
ZiiLABS United States 2009 2012 Assets split between Creative Technology and Intel

Graphics card makers

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Name Country of origin Year of market entry Year of market exit Chips used Fate Notes
Apple United States 1981 Active Various
Acer Taiwan 1987 Active Arc, Radeon, ALi (formerly)
Actix Systems United States 1990 1998 S3 Dissolution
Appian Graphics United States 1994 2001 Acquired by ATI Technologies
Artist Graphics United States 1979 1995 Bankruptcy
ASRock Taiwan 2002 Active Arc, Radeon
Asus Taiwan 1996 Active GeForce, Radeon, ViRGE (formerly) [8]
BFG Technologies United States 2002 2010 Bankruptcy
Biostar Taiwan 2004 Active Radeon, GeForce
Boca Research United States 1989 2002 Acquired by Ener1
Cardinal Technologies United States 1991 1997 Bankruptcy
Chaintech Taiwan Un­known Un­known GeForce
Creative Technology Singapore 1994 Un­known Various [9]
Cromemco United States 1975 1987 Sold to Dynatech Corporation Introduced the first color graphics card for microcomputers, the Dazzler, in 1976
Diamond Multimedia United States 1989 Active Various
Elitegroup Computer Systems Taiwan 1992 Active [10]
ELSA Technology Germany 1989 Active GeForce, S3 (formerly) [11]
EVGA United States 1999 2022 GeForce Exited the graphics card industry; still in business
Foxconn Taiwan 2004 Un­known GeForce [12]
Gainward Taiwan 1995 Active GeForce, Trio (formerly), ViRGE (formerly) [13]
GALAX Hong Kong 1994 Active GeForce
Gigabyte Technology Taiwan Un­known Active GeForce, Radeon
Hercules Computer Technology United States 1982 1998 Acquired by Guillemot Corporation
Hightech Information System Hong Kong 2002 Active Radeon [14]
Colorful Co., Ltd. [zh] Taiwan 1995 Active GeForce
Innovation Computer United States 1983 Un­known Dissolution
Leadtek Taiwan 1995 Active GeForce, Tseng Labs (formerly) [15]
Maxsun [zh] Taiwan 2002 Active GeForce
Media Vision United States 1990 1996 Bankruptcy
Micro-Star International Taiwan 1986 Active Radeon, GeForce
Nth Graphics United States 1986 Un­known Bankruptcy [16]: 39 
Orchid Technology United States 1982 1994 Acquired by Micronics Computers, then by Diamond Multimedia
Palit Microsystems Taiwan 1988 Active GeForce, Trident (formerly), S3 (formerly)
PNY Technologies United States 2001 Active GeForce [17]
Point of View Netherlands 2000 Active
PowerColor Taiwan 1997 Active Radeon
Sapphire Technology Hong Kong 2001 Active Radeon
Sparkle Computer Taiwan 2000 Active Arc, GeForce (formerly) [18]
Spea Software Germany 1985 1995 Acquired by Diamond Multimedia in 1995, then by ATI Technologies in 2001
STB Systems United States 1981 1999 Acquired by 3dfx
Vectrix United States 1980 1993 Bankruptcy
Vermont Microsystems United States 1982 Un­known Bankruptcy
XFX United States 2002 Active Radeon, GeForce
Zotac Hong Kong 2006 Active GeForce

References

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  1. ^ "Broadcom Agrees to Buy Alphamosaic". Los Angeles Times. September 21, 2004. Archived from the original on February 3, 2024. Retrieved February 3, 2024.
  2. ^ Donelan, Jenny (October 2001). "Evans & Sutherland Computer Corp". Computer Graphics World. 24 (10). PennWell: 10 – via Gale. Evans & Sutherland Computer Corp. (Salt Lake City, UT) has announced that it will sell its REALimage business unit, which makes semiconductor chips for advanced graphics and video applications, to the Japanese firm of Real Vision. The sale has a maximum value of $12 million.
  3. ^ Tyson, Mark (March 30, 2022). "China's First Domestic GPU Announced with 1080p League of Legends Demo". Tom's Hardware. Future Publishing.
  4. ^ Shilov, Anton (September 6, 2023). "GPU Market 'Healthy and vibrant' in Q2 2023: Report". Tom's Hardware. Archived from the original on March 14, 2024. Retrieved March 14, 2024.
  5. ^ O'Brien, Bill (December 1992). "Celerite Galaxy 2000". Computer Shopper. 12 (12). SX2 Media Labs: 178 – via Gale.
  6. ^ Ristelhueber, Robert (April 12, 1999). "S3-Via Deal to Integrate Graphics, Logic". Electronic News. 45 (15). Sage Publications: 2 – via Gale.
  7. ^ Brown, Richard (July 6, 2011). "VIA Technologies Announces Sale of Stake in S3 Graphics". Business Wire.
  8. ^ "ASUS Graphics Card 20th Anniversary". Asus.com. ASUSTeK Computer. 2016.
  9. ^ Hottinger, Katie (April 25, 1994). "Cirrus buys Austek patents, 3Dlabs teams with Creative in 3D graphics". Electronic News. 40 (2011). Sage Publications: 8 – via Gale.
  10. ^ Staff writer (September 21, 1992). "Elitegroup graphics card supports 16.7M colors". PC Week. 9 (38). Ziff-Davis: 34 – via Gale.
  11. ^ Haefeker, Walter; Donna Fritz (December 4, 1989). "ELSA GmbH announces its new U.S. operation, ELSA America, to provide higher performance graphics capability". PR Newswire – via Gale.
  12. ^ Staff writer (July 1, 2004). "Nvidia Debuts MXM Graphics Interface for Notebooks". Computer Workstations. 17 (7). Worldwide Videotex – via Gale.
  13. ^ Brown, Bruce (July 1996). "Go much faster for a lot less". Computer Shopper. 16 (7). SX2 Media Labs: 367 et seq. – via Gale.
  14. ^ "ATI Technologies Inc. Expands Add-In-Board Business with Two New Strategic Relationships". Market News Publishing. COMTEX News Network. March 12, 2002 – via Gale.
  15. ^ Staff writer (September 1995). "WinFast T230 Pro with LeadPhone". PC World. 13 (9). IDG Communications: 90 – via Gale.
  16. ^ Estill, Lyle (January 1990). "Unfree Enterprise". Journal of Business Ethics. 9 (1). Springer Nature: 39–43 – via JSTOR.
  17. ^ Staff writer (October 1, 2001). "NVIDIA GeForce Titanium Series of GPUs Selected by Top PC and Add-In-Card OEMS". PR Newswire – via Gale.
  18. ^ Jenkins, Jason (May 2001). "Party like it's 999£". PC Direct. ZDNet: 154 et seq. – via Gale.