The 8514 was introduced with the IBM Personal System/2 computers in April 1987. It was an optional upgrade to the Micro Channel architecture based PS/2's Video Graphics Array, and was delivered within three months of PS/2's introduction. Although not the first PC video card to support hardware acceleration, IBM's 8514 is often credited as the first PC mass-market fixed-function accelerator. Up until the 8514's introduction, PC graphics acceleration was relegated to expensive workstation-class, graphics coprocessor boards. Coprocessor boards were designed around special CPU or digital signal processor chips which were programmable. Fixed-function accelerators, such as the 8514, sacrificed programmability for better cost/performance ratio. Later compatible 8514 boards were based on the Texas InstrumentsTMS34010 chip. Even though the 8514 was never a best-seller, the product created a market for fixed-function PC graphics accelerators which grew exponentially in the early 1990s. The ATI Mach 8 and Mach 32 chips were popular clones, and several companies designed graphics accelerator chips which were not register compatible but were conceptually very similar to the 8514/A. 8514 was superseded by IBM XGA.
Software support
Software that supported this graphic standard:
OS/2
Windows 2.1
Windows 3.x
Windows 95
XFree86 2.1.1
Autocad 10
QuikMenu
Clone hardware
Third-party graphics suppliers did not clone IBM's 8514/A as extensively as the VGA. This may be due to the 8514/A being a GPU, not just a graphics array like the VGA. IBM's 8514/A boards were not cheap; the 8514 initially sold for $1290 for the adapter and $270 for the 512KB memory expansion. The 8514/A market was severely limited by the fact that IBM's boards were made only for MCA systems at a time when ISA systems were the most common. In the late 1980s, several companies cloned the 8514/A often for the ISA bus. Notable among those was Western Digital Imaging's PWGA-1, the Chips & Technologies 82C480, and ATI's Mach 8 and later Mach 32 chips. In one way or another, the clones were all better than the original with more speed, enhanced drawing functionality and overall improved video mode selections. Clone support for non-interlaced modes at resolutions like 800×600 and 1280×1024 was typical, and all clones had longer command queues for increased performance. Notable clone adapter cards
ATI Technologies: the Mach8, Mach32, Graphics Vantage and 8514/Ultra
Chips & Technologies: F82C480 B EIZO - AA40 and F82C481 Miro Magic Plus
Matrox: MG-108
Paradise Systems: Plus-A, Renaissance Rendition II