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Extended Graphics Array
The eXtended Graphics Array (usually called XGA) is a graphics card manufactured by IBM and introduced for the IBM PS/2 line of personal computers in 1990 as a successor to the 8514/A. It supports, among other modes, a display resolution of 1024 × 768 pixels with 256 colors at 43.5 Hz (interlaced), or 640 × 480 at 60 Hz (non-interlaced) with up to 65,536 colors. The XGA-2 added an 800 × 600 65,536 color mode and 1024 × 768 60 Hz non-interlaced.
The XGA was introduced at $1095 with 512K VRAM and additional $350 for the 512 KB memory expansion (equivalent to $2600 and $840, respectively, in 2024). As with the 8514/A, XGA required a Micro Channel architecture bus at a time when ISA systems were standard, however due to more extensive documentation and licensing ISA clones of XGA were made. XGA was integrated into the motherboard of the PS/2 Model 95 XP 486.
An improved version called XGA-2 was introduced in 1992 at $360, worth $810 in 2024 dollars.
XGA gives its name to the resolution 1024 × 768, as IBM's VGA gave its name to 640 × 480, despite the IBM 8514/A and PGC cards respectively supporting those resolutions prior to the eponyms.
The 8514 had used a standardised API called the "Adapter Interface" or AI. This interface is also used by XGA, IBM Image Adapter/A, and clones of the 8514/A and XGA such as the ATI Technologies Mach 32 and IIT AGX. The interface allows computer software to offload common 2D-drawing operations (line-draw, color-fill, and block copies via a blitter) onto the hardware. This frees the host CPU for other tasks, and greatly improves the speed of redrawing a graphics visual (such as a pie-chart or CAD-illustration). Hardware-level documentation of the XGA was also made, which had not been available for the 8514/A.
XGA introduced a 64x64 hardware sprite which was typically used for the mouse pointer.
XGA-2 added support for non-interlaced 1024 × 768 and made 1MB VRAM standard. It had a programmable PLL circuit and pixel clocks up to 90 MHz, enabling a 75 Hz refresh rate at 1024 × 768. The 800 × 600 resolution was added with 16 bit high color support. The DAC was increased to 8 bits per channel, and the accelerated functions were enabled at 16 bit color depth. Faster VRAM also improved performance.
The XGA offered:
Hub AI
Extended Graphics Array AI simulator
(@Extended Graphics Array_simulator)
Extended Graphics Array
The eXtended Graphics Array (usually called XGA) is a graphics card manufactured by IBM and introduced for the IBM PS/2 line of personal computers in 1990 as a successor to the 8514/A. It supports, among other modes, a display resolution of 1024 × 768 pixels with 256 colors at 43.5 Hz (interlaced), or 640 × 480 at 60 Hz (non-interlaced) with up to 65,536 colors. The XGA-2 added an 800 × 600 65,536 color mode and 1024 × 768 60 Hz non-interlaced.
The XGA was introduced at $1095 with 512K VRAM and additional $350 for the 512 KB memory expansion (equivalent to $2600 and $840, respectively, in 2024). As with the 8514/A, XGA required a Micro Channel architecture bus at a time when ISA systems were standard, however due to more extensive documentation and licensing ISA clones of XGA were made. XGA was integrated into the motherboard of the PS/2 Model 95 XP 486.
An improved version called XGA-2 was introduced in 1992 at $360, worth $810 in 2024 dollars.
XGA gives its name to the resolution 1024 × 768, as IBM's VGA gave its name to 640 × 480, despite the IBM 8514/A and PGC cards respectively supporting those resolutions prior to the eponyms.
The 8514 had used a standardised API called the "Adapter Interface" or AI. This interface is also used by XGA, IBM Image Adapter/A, and clones of the 8514/A and XGA such as the ATI Technologies Mach 32 and IIT AGX. The interface allows computer software to offload common 2D-drawing operations (line-draw, color-fill, and block copies via a blitter) onto the hardware. This frees the host CPU for other tasks, and greatly improves the speed of redrawing a graphics visual (such as a pie-chart or CAD-illustration). Hardware-level documentation of the XGA was also made, which had not been available for the 8514/A.
XGA introduced a 64x64 hardware sprite which was typically used for the mouse pointer.
XGA-2 added support for non-interlaced 1024 × 768 and made 1MB VRAM standard. It had a programmable PLL circuit and pixel clocks up to 90 MHz, enabling a 75 Hz refresh rate at 1024 × 768. The 800 × 600 resolution was added with 16 bit high color support. The DAC was increased to 8 bits per channel, and the accelerated functions were enabled at 16 bit color depth. Faster VRAM also improved performance.
The XGA offered: