From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Xbox technical specifications describe the various components of the Xbox video game console.

The top of the Xbox, disassembled. It uses a standard DVD-ROM and Hard-disk drive via Parallel ATA.

Central processing unit

Xbox CPU

Memory

  • Shared graphics memory sub-system
    • 64  MB DDR SDRAM at 200 MHz; in dual-channel 128-bit configuration giving 6400 MB/s (6.4 GB/s) [5]
      • Maximum of 1.06 GB/s bandwidth accessible by CPU FSB
      • Theoretical 5.34 GB/s bandwidth shared by rest of the system
    • Supplied by Hynix or Samsung depending on manufacture date and location

Graphics processing unit

The XGPU
  • GPU and system chipset: 233 MHz " NV2A" ASIC. Co-developed by Microsoft and Nvidia and essentially a variant of Geforce 3 chips.
    • Floating-point performance: 4.66 GFLOPS [6]
    • Geometry engine: 115 million vertices per second, 125 million particles per second (peak)
    • 4 pixel pipelines with 2 texture units each
    • Peak fillrate:
      • Rendering fillrate: 932 megapixels per second (233 MHz × 4 pipelines)
      • Texture fillrate: 1,864 megatexels per second (932 MP × 2 texture units)
    • Realistic fillrate:
    • Peak triangle performance: 29,125,000 32-pixel triangles per second, raw or with 2 textures and lighting (32-pixel divided from peak fillrate)
      • 485,416 triangles per frame at 60 frames per second
      • 970,833 triangles per frame at 30 frames per second
    • Realistic triangle performance: 7,812,500–21,875,000 32-pixel triangles per second, with 2 textures, lighting, Z-buffering, fogging and alpha blending (32-pixel divided from realistic fillrate)
      • 130,208–364,583 triangles per frame at 60 frames per second
      • 260,416–729,166 triangles per frame at 30 frames per second
    • 4 textures per pass, texture compression, full scene anti-aliasing (NV Quincunx, supersampling, multisampling)
    • Bilinear, trilinear, and anisotropic texture filtering
    • Performance lies between a Geforce 3 Series GPU and a Geforce 4 Series GPU. This is due to the added vertex shader present on the ASIC, thus doubling the vertex output compared to Geforce 3 ASICs. Clock speed is the same as the original Geforce 3 series GPU (233 MHz) thus slower than Geforce 4 series starting at 250 MHz. [8]

Storage

An original Xbox hard disk drive

Audio

The Xbox motherboard

Connectivity

The Xbox has a standard AC in, A/V connector and Ethernet port.
Left: "High Definition AV Pack"; right: HDMI

Physical specifications

  • Weight: 3.86 kg (8.5  lb)
  • Dimensions: 320 × 100 × 260 mm (12.5 × 4 × 10.5 in) [9]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Microsoft announces X-BOX". 2000-04-07. Archived from the original on 2000-04-07. Retrieved 2020-08-14.
  2. ^ "xbox.com || hardware || consoles || xbox video game system". 2001-10-06. Archived from the original on 2001-10-06. Retrieved 2020-08-14.
  3. ^ XBox Specs - IGN, 2001-10-02, retrieved 2020-08-14
  4. ^ "CES 2001: Microsoft Unveils the Xbox Console". GameSpot. 2001-01-06. Retrieved 2020-08-14.
  5. ^ a b "Hardware Behind the Consoles: Microsoft's Xbox". Anandtech. 2001-11-21. Archived from the original on 2016-06-27. Retrieved 2017-05-20.
  6. ^ https://forum.beyond3d.com/threads/historical-gpu-flops-performance.45255/post-1281200
  7. ^ Graphics Processor Specifications, IGN, 2001
  8. ^ "Hardware Behind the Consoles - Part I: Microsoft's Xbox - The X-IGP". Anandtech.com. 2001-11-21. Retrieved 2010-11-11.
  9. ^ Original Xbox Technical Specifications Archived October 10, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Xbox technical specifications describe the various components of the Xbox video game console.

The top of the Xbox, disassembled. It uses a standard DVD-ROM and Hard-disk drive via Parallel ATA.

Central processing unit

Xbox CPU

Memory

  • Shared graphics memory sub-system
    • 64  MB DDR SDRAM at 200 MHz; in dual-channel 128-bit configuration giving 6400 MB/s (6.4 GB/s) [5]
      • Maximum of 1.06 GB/s bandwidth accessible by CPU FSB
      • Theoretical 5.34 GB/s bandwidth shared by rest of the system
    • Supplied by Hynix or Samsung depending on manufacture date and location

Graphics processing unit

The XGPU
  • GPU and system chipset: 233 MHz " NV2A" ASIC. Co-developed by Microsoft and Nvidia and essentially a variant of Geforce 3 chips.
    • Floating-point performance: 4.66 GFLOPS [6]
    • Geometry engine: 115 million vertices per second, 125 million particles per second (peak)
    • 4 pixel pipelines with 2 texture units each
    • Peak fillrate:
      • Rendering fillrate: 932 megapixels per second (233 MHz × 4 pipelines)
      • Texture fillrate: 1,864 megatexels per second (932 MP × 2 texture units)
    • Realistic fillrate:
    • Peak triangle performance: 29,125,000 32-pixel triangles per second, raw or with 2 textures and lighting (32-pixel divided from peak fillrate)
      • 485,416 triangles per frame at 60 frames per second
      • 970,833 triangles per frame at 30 frames per second
    • Realistic triangle performance: 7,812,500–21,875,000 32-pixel triangles per second, with 2 textures, lighting, Z-buffering, fogging and alpha blending (32-pixel divided from realistic fillrate)
      • 130,208–364,583 triangles per frame at 60 frames per second
      • 260,416–729,166 triangles per frame at 30 frames per second
    • 4 textures per pass, texture compression, full scene anti-aliasing (NV Quincunx, supersampling, multisampling)
    • Bilinear, trilinear, and anisotropic texture filtering
    • Performance lies between a Geforce 3 Series GPU and a Geforce 4 Series GPU. This is due to the added vertex shader present on the ASIC, thus doubling the vertex output compared to Geforce 3 ASICs. Clock speed is the same as the original Geforce 3 series GPU (233 MHz) thus slower than Geforce 4 series starting at 250 MHz. [8]

Storage

An original Xbox hard disk drive

Audio

The Xbox motherboard

Connectivity

The Xbox has a standard AC in, A/V connector and Ethernet port.
Left: "High Definition AV Pack"; right: HDMI

Physical specifications

  • Weight: 3.86 kg (8.5  lb)
  • Dimensions: 320 × 100 × 260 mm (12.5 × 4 × 10.5 in) [9]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Microsoft announces X-BOX". 2000-04-07. Archived from the original on 2000-04-07. Retrieved 2020-08-14.
  2. ^ "xbox.com || hardware || consoles || xbox video game system". 2001-10-06. Archived from the original on 2001-10-06. Retrieved 2020-08-14.
  3. ^ XBox Specs - IGN, 2001-10-02, retrieved 2020-08-14
  4. ^ "CES 2001: Microsoft Unveils the Xbox Console". GameSpot. 2001-01-06. Retrieved 2020-08-14.
  5. ^ a b "Hardware Behind the Consoles: Microsoft's Xbox". Anandtech. 2001-11-21. Archived from the original on 2016-06-27. Retrieved 2017-05-20.
  6. ^ https://forum.beyond3d.com/threads/historical-gpu-flops-performance.45255/post-1281200
  7. ^ Graphics Processor Specifications, IGN, 2001
  8. ^ "Hardware Behind the Consoles - Part I: Microsoft's Xbox - The X-IGP". Anandtech.com. 2001-11-21. Retrieved 2010-11-11.
  9. ^ Original Xbox Technical Specifications Archived October 10, 2010, at the Wayback Machine

Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook