
S3 Trio - Wikipedia
The S3 Trio range were popular video cards for personal computers and were S3's first fully integrated graphics accelerators. As the name implies, three previously separate components …
S3 Graphics - Wikipedia
S3 Graphics, Ltd. was an American computer graphics company. The company sold the Trio, ViRGE, Savage, and Chrome series of graphics processors. Struggling against competition …
S3 Trio Series (1994-1998) - DOS Days
Jul 29, 1997 · A summary of the Trio range is listed below: Trio64 - first version of the chip, launched in late 1994. PCI or VESA Local Bus only. Trio64V+ - Trio32 - cost-effective variant, …
DOS Days - S3
Sep 1, 1998 · The Trio 64 (or Trio64), also known as the S3 86C764, was S3's attempt to integrate a RAMDAC, clock generator and graphics core into their Vision864 chip. In 1994, it …
S3 Graphics: Gone But Not Forgotten - TechSpot
Aug 24, 2023 · To that end, S3 released the Trio chip series a year later, which integrated the graphics acceleration circuits, with the RAMDAC and clock generator. The result was a …
S3 - Vogons Wiki
S3 Trio 3D/2X The ViRGE is the first S3 chip with 3D acceleration support and launched in 1996. Aside from the 3D hardware, it is quite similar to the Trio64V+.
S3 Trio64 video driver + utility - The Retro Web
Jan 1, 1996 · Download S3 Trio64 video driver + utility, released 1996-01-01. The Retro Web Support Us Articles. Motherboards BIOS images Chips Chipsets Expansion cards Hard drives …
S3 Trio3D/2x - is this just a rebadged ViRGE or more? - VOGONS
Sep 6, 2011 · Trio 3d is Virge rebranded as business accelerator. It fixed the blending bugs of Virge. The 2x version has its own drivers and can do better in some geometry tests, so I think …
The S3 Trio64Ô integrated graphic accelerator (hereinafter referred to as the Trio64) is the first in a series of highly-integrated products to be offered by S3. It combines a 24-bit RAMDAC, dual …
S3 Trio 3D 2X - Hardware museum
Oct 15, 2012 · Trio 3D 2X is based on the 86C368 GPU with 8 MB of SDRAM. Running at 100/100 MHz. Supports DirectX 5. Introduced in 1999.