- Glaze3D
Glaze3D was a family of
graphics card s announced byBitBoys Oy onAugust 2 ,1999 that would have produced substantially better performance than other consumerPetri Nordlund. "Glaze3D". Bitboys Oy.] products available at the time. The family, which would have come in the Glaze3D 1200, Glaze3D 2400 and Glaze3D 4800 models, was supposed to offer full support forDirectX 7 ,OpenGL 1.2, AGP 4×, 4×anisotropic filtering , full-screen anti-aliasing and a host of other technologies not commonly seen at the time. The 1.5 million gateGPU would have been fabricated byInfineon on a 0.2 μm eDRAM process, later to be reduced to 0.17 μm with a minimum of 9 MB of embeddedDRAM and 128 to 512 MB of externalSDRAM . The maximum supportedvideo resolution was 2048×1536pixel s.Development History
The Glaze3D family of cards were developed in several generations, beginning with the original Glaze3D "400" with multi-channel RDRAM instead of internal eDRAM. This was offered only as IP but with no takers. Bitboys revised the design and decided to have it manufactured themselves, in cooperation with Infineon Technologies, the chip fabbing arm of Siemens. They came up with a new Glaze3D pitched for release in Q1,
2000 . The card promised extremely high performance compared to contemporary consumer GPUs. As bug-hunting, validation and manufacturing problems delayed the launch, new features became necessary and a DX7 variant with built-in hardware Transform & Lighting was announced, but never appeared.The GPU was later redesigned under a new codename, Axe, to take advantage of
DirectX 8 and compete with a developing competition. The new version sported such features as an additional 3 MB ofeDRAM , proprietary Matrix Antialiasing and a vastly improvedfillrate , as well as offering a programmablevertex shader and widened internal memory bus. The new card was to have been released as Avalanche3D by the end of2001 .The third development, codenamed Hammer, started development as Axe lost viability toward the end of
2001 . This new card was to be a high-endDirectX 9 part, offering new features such asocclusion culling , improved rendering performance and various other innovations. This version, like the ones before it, never shipped commercially.Bitboys turned to mobile graphics and developed an accelerator licensed and probably used by at least one flat panel display manufacture, although it was intended and designed primarily for higher-end handhelds. Later on ATI bought Bitboys for an extra research and development unit, so as of 2008 Bitboys is owned by AMD.
Performance Claims
The Glaze3D family was well-known for the bold performance claims that were associated with it. The low-end 1200 model was purported to achieve a fillrate of 1.2 billion
texel s per second, with a geometry throughput of 15 million triangles per second. Most importantly, the card was originally claimed to achieve over 200 frames per second in id Software'sQuake 3 at maximum visual quality.cite web
url=http://www.shugashack.com/docs/press/080299bitboysoy.htm
title=BITBOYS OY UNVEILS GLAZE3D PRODUCT FAMILY|accessdate=2006-06-11| author=BitBoys Oy]The 1200 model's claimed specifications would place it as the rough equivalent of the GeForce FX 5200 Ultra or Radeon 9200 Pro, while its claimed performance would place it at the same level as the GeForce 3 Ti 500 or
Radeon 8500 . To compound matters, the cards' specifications were later updated to nearly double their original performance levels.While the Glaze3D 1200 was supposed to achieve unheard of performance in
video game s, it was claimed that the 2400 and 4800 models would each be substantially more powerful in turn. Using two and four GPU configurations respectively, and including an additionalgeometry accelerator on the 4800, the higher-end Glaze3D cards were to be aimed at the very highest end of the video gaming market.ee also
*
ATI Technologies
*NVIDIA References
External links
* [http://www.shugashack.com/docs/press/080299bitboysoy.htm Glaze3D Announced]
* [http://www.graphicshardware.org/previous/www_1999/presentations/glaze3d.pdf PDF version] of a presentation by Petri Norlund, Chief Architect at BitBoys Oy in1999 .
* [http://www.firingsquad.com/features/siggraph99/default.asp BitBoys at Siggraph] - analysis of the Glaze3D cards.
* [http://www.firingsquad.com/hardware/bitboys/default.asp A Look Inside BitBoys] - a detailed description of the development history of Glaze3D.
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