IBM 8514 is an
IBM graphics
computer display standard
supporting a
display resolution
of 1024×768
pixels with 256 colors at 43.5
Hz (
interlaced), or
640×480 at 60 Hz (non-interlaced). 8514 usually refers to the
display controller hardware (such as the
8514/A display
adapter.) However, IBM sold the companion CRT monitor (for
use with the 8514/A) which carries the same designation,
8514.
8514 used a standardised programming interface called the "Adapter
Interface" or AI.
This interface is also used by XGA, IBM's
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,
BITBLT)
onto the 8514 hardware. This freed the host
CPU for other tasks, and greatly
improved the speed of redrawing a graphics visual (such as a
pie-chart or
CAD-illustration).
History
8514 was introduced at the same time as
VGA
(
1987).
Although not the first PC
video card to
support
hardware acceleration, IBM's 8514 is often
credited as the first PC mass-market
fixed-function accelerator. Up until the 8514's
introduction, PC graphics acceleration was relegated to expensive
workstation-class, graphics
coprocessor boards.
Coprocessor-boards (such as IBM's
PGC and the
TARGA Truevision series) were designed around special
CPU or DSP chips, which in theory could execute a compiled program.
(IBM PGC
used a variant of the Intel
8086
processor. At least 1 Truevision model used the Texas
Instruments
TMS34010.) Fixed-function accelerators, such as the
8514, sacrificed programmability for better cost/performance
ratio.
8514 was later superseded by IBM
XGA.
Clone hardware
Third-party graphics suppliers did not clone IBM's 8514 as
extensively as VGA. Nevertheless, ATI did develop 8514-compatible
graphics controllers : the Mach8 and Mach32. Both were sold in
ATI-branded graphics boards.
See also
Further reading