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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Open Graphics Project (OGP) was founded with the goal to design an open-source hardware / open architecture and standard for graphics cards, primarily targeting free software / open-source operating systems. The project created a reprogrammable development and prototyping board and had aimed to eventually produce a full-featured and competitive end-user graphics card.
This article needs to be updated. (February 2011) |
Open Graphics Project | |
---|---|
Commercial? | Yes |
Type of project | Open hardware |
Website | wiki.opengraphics.org at the Wayback Machine (archived June 9, 2010) |
The project's first product was a PCI graphics card dubbed OGD1, which used a field-programmable gate array (FPGA) chip. Although the card did not have the same level of performance or functionality as graphics cards on the market at the time, it was intended to be useful as a tool for prototyping the project's first application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) board, as well as for other professionals needing programmable graphics cards or FPGA-based prototyping boards. It was also hoped that this prototype would attract enough interest to gain some profit and attract investors for the next card, since it was expected to cost around US$2,000,000 to start the production of a specialized ASIC design. PCI Express and/or Mini-PCI variations were planned to follow. The OGD1 began shipping in September 2010,[1] some six years after the project began and 3 years after the appearance of the first prototypes.[2]
Full specifications will be published and open-source device drivers will be released. All RTL will be released. Source code to the device drivers and BIOS will be released under the MIT and BSD licenses. The RTL (in Verilog) used for the FPGA and the RTL used for the ASIC are planned to be released under the GNU General Public License (GPL).
It has 256 MiB of DDR RAM, is passively cooled, and follows the DDC, EDID, DPMS and VBE VESA standards. TV-out is also planned.
Versioning schema for OGD1 will go like this:
{Root Number} – {Video Memory}{Video Output Interfaces}{Special Options e.g.: A1 OGA firmware installed}
Field | Example Value | Example Description |
---|---|---|
Root number | OGD1P- | OGD1 board with PCI Bus |
Video memory | 256 | 256 MiB |
Video outputs, in order, skip any not installed | ||
First interface | D | Dual-link DVI |
Second interface | D | Dual-link DVI |
Third interface | A | Analog video, 75 ohm, VGA compatible |
Fourth interface | V | TV video |
Special options, in alphanumeric order, each preceded by a dash | ||
Factory firmware-RTL | A1 | OGA1 Firmware |
Main components of OGD1 graphics card (shown on the picture)[3]
The OGP project failed to gain the necessary funding to produce an ASIC version of its card. The project appears to have been discontinued in 2011.
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