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- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 abstract "The Tseng Labs ET4000 was a popular graphics accelerator chip during the early 1990s, commonly found in many 486 and compatible systems.At introduction (1991), the original ET4000 was notable for its outstanding host-interface (ISA) throughput. Twice as fast as VGA-chips from Trident Microsystems and Oak Technologies, the ET4000's only superior was a VRAM-based board from Video 7 along with ATI's VGAWonder+. Hardware GUI acceleration had not yet become mainstream, and so host-throughput was the dominating factor in a graphical-application's redraw speed. Equipped with an ET4000, a raw Windows PC would scroll text-windows noticeably faster and more smoothly. (According to Richard Ferraro's book Programmer's Guide to EGA, VGA, the original ET4000 devoted as much as 30% of its silicon die area to a large host-interface FIFO.)Hardware acceleration was introduced in the ET4000/W32. Although the W32 maintained Tseng's stellar host-interface throughput, hardware-acceleration reduced its importance (except for DOS). By the time PCI Windows accelerators became commonplace, Tseng's high host-throughput was no longer a distinguishing feature. Nevertheless, as a mid-priced Windows accelerator, the W32 benchmarked favorably against competing S3 and ATI chips.The ET4000AX had no 3D core or shader. It used 32 bit, asynchronous EDO/FPM (70 ns) DRAM which gave a transfer speed of ~56 MB/s.None of the members of the ET4000 family offered an integrated RAMDAC. By the time the W32p was introduced, the lack of this feature harmed Tseng's competitiveness. Still, the W32p was used on several popular mid-range VLB-based video cards. W32p offered solid Windows GUI acceleration at a reasonable price, along with considerably competent DOS VGA performance. Tseng carried this DOS performance along with them with their later ET6000 accelerator.Tseng Labs' chipsets were part of many companies' lineups, notably with Hercules' Dynamite series, the Diamond Stealth 32 and several Speedstar cards, and on many generic boards.".
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 thumbnail ET4000AX.JPG?width=300.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageExternalLink Videochipsets.html.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageID "1590082".
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageLength "4159".
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageOutDegree "35".
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageRevisionID "647556987".
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink 80486.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink ATI_Technologies.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink BitBLT.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Bit_blit.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Category:Graphics_processing_units.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Cirrus_Logic.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Conventional_PCI.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink DOS.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Diamond_Multimedia.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Die_(integrated_circuit).
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Extended_Industry_Standard_Architecture.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink FIFO_(computing_and_electronics).
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink File:ET4000-W32P_PCI_Card.jpg.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Graphics_accelerator.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Graphics_processing_unit.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Hardware_acceleration.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Hercules_Computer_Technology.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Hercules_Computer_Technology,_Inc..
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Industry_Standard_Architecture.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Industry_standard_architecture.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Intel_80486.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Interleaved_memory.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Oak_Technologies.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Oak_Technology.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Peripheral_Component_Interconnect.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink RAMDAC.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink S3_Graphics.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Silicon_die.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Trident_Microsystems.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Tseng_Labs.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Tseng_Labs_ET6000.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink VESA_Local_Bus.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink VGA.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink VRAM.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Video_7.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Video_Graphics_Array.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink Video_RAM.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink File:Dstealth32.jpg.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLink File:ET4000AX.JPG.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLinkText "ET4000".
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLinkText "Tseng Labs ET4000".
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLinkText "Tseng Labs ET4000/W32p".
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wikiPageWikiLinkText "Tseng Labs ET4000AX".
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 hasPhotoCollection Tseng_Labs_ET4000.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 subject Category:Graphics_processing_units.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 hypernym Chip.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 type Card.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 type Circuit.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 type Compatible.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 comment "The Tseng Labs ET4000 was a popular graphics accelerator chip during the early 1990s, commonly found in many 486 and compatible systems.At introduction (1991), the original ET4000 was notable for its outstanding host-interface (ISA) throughput. Twice as fast as VGA-chips from Trident Microsystems and Oak Technologies, the ET4000's only superior was a VRAM-based board from Video 7 along with ATI's VGAWonder+.".
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 label "Tseng Labs ET4000".
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 sameAs m.05dv_z.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 sameAs Q7849533.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 sameAs Q7849533.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 wasDerivedFrom Tseng_Labs_ET4000?oldid=647556987.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 depiction ET4000AX.JPG.
- Tseng_Labs_ET4000 isPrimaryTopicOf Tseng_Labs_ET4000.