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Accelerated-X

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Accelerated-X
Developer(s)Xi Graphics
Stable release
Accelerated-X Summit v2.4
Operating systemmultiple (Linux, Solaris, AIX)
TypeWindowing system
LicenseProprietary[1]
Websitewww.xig.com

Accelerated-X is a proprietary port of the X Window System to Intel x86 machines.

History

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The Accelerated-X server is built on top of the X386 X server that was created by Thomas Roell for X11 Release 5. He founded a company in Colorado named Xi Graphics which still provides the Accelerated-X server. The XFree86 project was created as a free alternative to what became the Accelerated-X server.[citation needed]

Features

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Accelerated-X server provides an "overlay mode" on several graphics cards which allows running ancient, 256 color mode-only Unix alongside more modern applications on truecolor 24-bit displays.

It used to provide much better driver support (hardware acceleration, 3D and compatibility, especially on integrated graphics) than XFree86, at a time when the major graphics chipset vendors were not supporting Linux officially.

References

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  1. ^ "Demo INDEX". xig.com. Archived from the original on 2008-12-18.
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