Chips & Technologies, Inc.
C&T were an California-based chipset manufacturer for PC compatible motherboards, graphics cards, and peripherals such as hard disk controllers.
The were notable in 1986 as being the first company to reverse-engineer IBM's EGA to produce their own EGA chipset, which they then sold to numerous graphics card manufacturers.
They were more prominent in the late 1980s, up to 80386DX era. They were later acquired by Intel in 1997, primarily for their graphics chip business.
C&T chipsets in chronological order:
Motherboard Chipsets | Graphics Card Chipsets |
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P82C100/P82C101 XT chipset (1987) P82C211 NEAT chipset (1987) CS8230 386 chipset (1989) CS8235/CS8236 SCAT chipset (1989) |
CS8240 EGA chipset (1985) CS82C435 Enhanced Graphics Controller (1987) 82C441 VGA Controller (1987) 82C451 VGA Controller (1990) 82C455 VGA Controller (1990) 82C456 VGA Controller (1990) 82C480 VGA Controller (1990) 82C481 VGA Controller (1992) 82C611/82C612 Micro Channel Interface (1993) |
MotherboardChipsets
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Graphics Card Chipsets
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Launched: 1987 The 82C435 Enhanced graphics controller chip integrated all four of the earlier CS8240 graphics chipset chips into a single 84-pin PLCC package. Its accompanying bus interface chip, 82A436, handled memory and I/O operations and came in a single 68-pin PLCC. The 82C435 Enhanced graphics controller and 82A436 bus interface allowed third-party graphics card manufacturers to implement a 100% EGA compatible card with as few as 13 additional components. And in the spirit of IBM compatibility, the card also fully supported the older IBM graphics standards of CGA, Monochrome, and Hercules. One feature that would be seen on competing products soon after was what C&T called 'Smart Auto-Emulation', which automatically adjusted to the graphics mode required by the application software. It could also handle dynamic reading and writing of registers without being reset, making task-switching/multi-window applications a possibility. An enhanced CGA mode was also provisioned, allowing the display of CGA text at EGA resolution (640 x 350). In addition, other aspects of the EGA standard including a light pen interface and Feature Connector (for external video, e.g. TV-out) were also included. The chipset supported a maximum of 256 KB of video memory for EGA modes, comprising up to eight 64k x 4 chips. This permitted resolutions of 640 x 480 in 16 colours, and 800 x 600 (larger than standard EGA, whose max resolution was 640 x 350) - these are sometimes called "Super EGA". 16k x 4 chips were not supported (so a 64 KB card is not supported with this chipset). When run in CGA modes, memory was limited to using 16 KB, and in Monochrome/Hercules text modes it was limited to 4 KB. Memory speeds supported were 100ns, 120ns and 150ns (120ns or faster is required for high-bandwidth CPU modes - see further down). Graphics Modes supported were:
The chipset could be driven at up to 25 MHz dot clock if an external crystal oscillator was employed in the design. When run in 320 x 200 modes, dot clock was halved. Performance of the 82C435 was excellent as it permitted the CPU two accesses to display memory for every four CRTC accesses, effectively doubling the memory bandwidth available to the CPU (and by translation, updating the screen twice as often). This mode could be used at up to 20 MHz video clock (standard EGA operation runs at 16 MHz). It was used on the following cards:
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82C441 VGA Controller (1987)Launched: 1987 The 82C441 was a single-chip solution for graphics card vendors, that provided up to 800 x 560 resolution in 16 colours, and 132-column text mode. It also supported 752 x 410 and the VGA standard of 640 x 480. It was used on the ATI EGA Wonder VIP. |
82C451 VGA Controller (1990)
Launched: 1990 The 82C451 was a single-chip solution for graphics card vendors, that provided up to 800 x 600 resolution in 16 colours, and 132-column text mode. Graphics cards that used this chipset include: |
82C455 VGA ControllerLaunched: 1990 |
82C456 VGA ControllerLaunched: 1990 |
82C480 VGA ControllerLaunched: 1990 |
82C481 VGA ControllerLaunched: 1992 The 82C481 was a True Color Graphics Accelerator chipset. |
82C611 / 82C612Launched: 1993 An interface for the Micro Channel Architecture (MCA) to allow MCA peripheral card design to have most of the interface logic on a single set of chips. |