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Famous Graphics Chips: Number Nine’s Imagine 128

By the early 1990s, the PC industry was still expanding and offering plenty of opportunity for all. IBM had lost its position of leadership and for a few years the market existed on commercial off the shelf (COTS) graphics chips from TI, and a bunch of XGA and VGA clone builders. In 1994, Number Nine, a small company in Boston, ...

Jon Peddie

By the early 1990s, the PC industry was still expanding and offering plenty of opportunity for all. IBM had lost its position of leadership and for a few years the market existed on commercial off the shelf (COTS) graphics chips from TI, and a bunch of XGA and VGA clone builders. In 1994, Number Nine, a small company in Boston, which had been selling me-too clone add-in boards (AIBs) surprised the industry with what would be the first of a series of proprietary custom graphics chips, they called it the Imagine 128. Number Nine had associated the company’s products and
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