EVGA GeForce 7300 GS Personal Cinema
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EVGA GeForce 7300 GS Personal Cinema
EVGA may refer to: * Extended Video Graphics Array, a VESA standard for 1024x768 resolution * EVGA Corporation EVGA Corporation is an American computer hardware company that produces motherboards, gaming laptops, power supplies, All-In-One Liquid Coolers, computer cases, and gaming mice. Founded on April 13, 1999, its headquarters are in Brea, Californ ..., an American computer hardware company * Evga S.A, a Greek dairy company {{disambiguation ...
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Extended Video Graphics Array
Extended Video Graphics Array (or EVGA) is a standard created by VESA in 1991 ( VBE 1.2) denoting a non-interlaced resolution of 1024x768 at a maximum of 70 Hz refresh rate. EVGA is similar to (but is not the same as) the IBM XGA standard. The 1990s were a period of evolving standards and EVGA did not achieve wide adoption. External links VESA standards: Video Electronics Standards Association home page See also * Graphic display resolutions * Super VGA Super VGA (SVGA) is a broad term that covers a wide range of computer display standards that extended IBM's VGA specification. When used as shorthand for a resolution, as VGA and XGA often are, SVGA refers to a resolution of 800×600. History ... * IBM 8514/A * IBM XGA * Expanded Graphics Adapter ( IBM 3270 PC peripheral, also referred as XGA) References Computer display standards {{compu-hardware-stub ...
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EVGA Corporation
EVGA Corporation is an American computer hardware company that produces motherboards, gaming laptops, power supplies, All-In-One Liquid Coolers, computer cases, and gaming mice. Founded on April 13, 1999, its headquarters are in Brea, California. EVGA also produced Nvidia-GPU-based video cards until 2022. Products EVGA products include motherboards, power supply units, and related accessories. EVGA initially made graphics cards, dating back to the RIVA TNT2 in 1999. Some of their graphics card models included the SC, SSC, Classified, Kingpin (Stylized K, NGP, N), and FTW editions (as well as special KO editions in the past). In September 2022, the company ended its relationship with NVIDIA and also stopped manufacturing graphics cards. Initially, its motherboards were limited to NVIDIA reference designs and expanded to non-reference designs based on NVIDIA chipsets until NVIDIA exited the motherboard market around 2009. EVGA motherboards began using Intel chipsets starting w ...
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