This article contains information about Intel's GPUs (see Intel Graphics Technology) and motherboard graphics chipsets in table form. In 1982, Intel licensed the NEC μPD7220 and announced it as the Intel 82720 Graphics Display Controller.[1][2]
Intel's first generation GPUs:
Intel marketed its second generation using the brand Extreme Graphics. These chips added support for texture combiners allowing support for OpenGL 1.3.
Intel's first DirectX 9 GPUs with hardware Pixel Shader 2.0 support.
The last generation of motherboard integrated graphics. Full hardware DirectX 10 support starting with GMA X3500.
Core m3-7Y30 Core m3-7Y32
Core m3-8100Y
Core m3-8300Y
Core m3-8500Y
Intel Xe is a GPGPU and dGPU product line first released in 2020, in the mobile Tiger Lake line and Rocket Lake, Alder Lake and Raptor Lake line.
Core i5-11600 Core i5-11600K Core i5-11600T Core i7-11700 Core i7-11700K Core i7-11700T Core i9-11900 Core i9-11900K Core i9-11900T
Core i3-1120G4
Pentium Gold 7505 Core i3-1115G4 Core i3-1125G4
Core i5-1140G7
Core i7-1180G7
Core i5-11300H
Core i5-1145G7
Core i7-1185G7 Core i7-11370H Core i7-11375H
Core i7-11390H
Celeron G6900T
Pentium Gold G7400T
i3-12100T
i3-12300T i5-12400 i5-12400T
i5-12500T i5-12600 i5-12600T
i7-12700 i7-12700T i7-12700K
i9-12900T i9-12900K i9-12900KS
Pentium 8500
Pentium 8505
i3-1220P
i7-1260U
i5-1245U
i7-1265U
i5-12500H
i5-12600H
i7-1270P i7-12700H i7-12800H
i9-12900H i9-12900HK
B570
Atom Z520
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Based on the Xe HPC architecture that uses both EMIB 2.5D and Foveros packaging technologies to combine 47 active tiles onto a single GPU, fabricated on five different process nodes, Intel Max Series GPUs enable greater flexibility and modularity in the construction of the SOC.