Type | Division of ETMA Corporation |
---|---|
Industry | Semiconductors |
Founded | 1994 |
Defunct | 2001 |
Fate | Acquired by Colorgraphic Communications, Inc., and ATI Technologies Inc. |
Headquarters | , |
Products | Graphics processing units |
Appian Graphics was a supplier of multi-monitor graphics accelerators founded in 1994.
The company was best known for its Jeronimo and Gemini product lines, and for the HydraVision display management software. [1] The main competitor for Appian on the multi-monitor solutions market was STB Systems.
The company was acquired in July 2001 by Colorgraphic Communications, Inc., which ceased business in 2007 or 2008. [2] [3]
Appian Graphics originally developed HydraVision in the late 1990s [4] for their multi-head display solutions. ATI Technologies acquired [5] HydraVision in July 2001 along with Appian's HydraVision team to join its then-new dual-head Radeon 7500 and 8500 series.
Appian Rotate was developed in 1998 for hardware accelerated portrait display, it allowed off the shelf graphics components that supported 3D texture mapping for rotating the offscreen desktop screen correctly onto the display out buffer. It has become the default standard in the industry for portrait mode and is still used by display drivers to support portrait display.
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ATI Technologies Inc., commonly called ATI, was a Canadian semiconductor technology corporation based in Markham, Ontario, that specialized in the development of graphics processing units and chipsets. Founded in 1985, the company listed publicly in 1993 and was acquired by AMD in 2006. As a major fabrication-less or fabless semiconductor company, ATI conducted research and development in-house and outsourced the manufacturing and assembly of its products. With the decline and eventual bankruptcy of 3dfx in 2000, ATI and its chief rival Nvidia emerged as the two dominant players in the graphics processors industry, eventually forcing other manufacturers into niche roles.
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On June 26, 2007, Dell released the new Inspiron desktop series, under the Dell Inspiron branding, as a replacement to the Dell Dimension desktop computers.
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: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) published Jan 25, 1999, retrieved November 26, 2010.