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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Matrox Collection
Description
An account of the resource
Matrox Electronic Systems was established in Montreal in 1976 at the peak of the North American computer hobby movement and the beginning of the rapid growth of the microcomputer market. Co-founders Lorne Trottier and Branko Matić identified an opportunity to expand the microcomputing market into video interfaces, providing microcomputers with graphic display capabilities. The company's first product, Video RAM (1976), was a specialized video-display device, which interfaced with a computer system to display computer-generated alphanumeric data stored in the device's RAM. The device's success generated the revenue necessary for the development of subsequent products. Among these were the MTX-1632 Video RAM and the ALT-series video graphics controllers. With the release of these devices, Matrox pioneered the graphics card add-on market for microcomputers.<br /><br />By 1978, Matrox offered a diverse line of advanced CRT display controllers, which could be used in various combinations supported with a wide choice of display formats, character sets, TV standards, display resolutions, bus compatibility, etc. According to Matrox 1978<br />product catalogue, "Matrox displays have been used in more than 10,000 installations in every imaginable operation: from ground control displays for the Viking mission to Mars to hobby displays."<br /><br />The following year, Matrox began to supply system integrators on Wall Street with a line of financial information display products. One of them, the Quad Video, powered four monitors becoming the first single-board hardware to provide multi-display support. This groundbreaking product established Matrox as the first graphics company to provide display solutions to the financial and business markets.<br /><br />In the 1980s, the company embarked on designing and manufacturing a range of graphics products for a variety of computer bus standards. Matrox also expanded its operations to include the production of microcomputers, such as the CCB-7 MACS and the MAP-2000 Super Microcomputer. Throughout the 1990s, Matrox introduced several lines of high-quality graphics products, notably the Millennium graphics cards, while gradually shifting its focus towards specialized markets.<br /><br />In the early 1990s, the company split into three distinct divisions: Matrox Graphics, Matrox Video, and Matrox Imaging. Matrox Graphics was focused on delivering graphics solutions, Matrox Video specialized in markets for the broadcast industry and digital video editing solutions, while Matrox Imaging concentrated on component-level solutions for machine vision applications.<br /><br />By the turn of the century, Matrox emerged as a leading global digital imaging company, offering a broad spectrum of hardware choices supported with leading-edge software solutions. Its hardware and software products found applications across an extensive range of industries, spanning broadcast and media, education, enterprise, government, houses of worship, medical, military and defence, process control and utilities, security, and transportation sectors.<br /><br />In 2022, Matrox Graphics was absorbed into Matrox Video. Two years later, Matrox Imaging, was acquired by Zebra Technologies Corp. In 2024, Matrox provided this concise corporate profile:<br /><br /><em>For over 45 years, Matrox has been synonymous with technology and innovation. A market</em><br /><em>leader in designing software and hardware solutions for Pro AV/IT, video, and imaging/machine</em><br /><em>vision applications, Matrox combines engineering excellence with deep industry expertise to deliver</em><br /><em>unique solutions that help our customers achieve their goals. Matrox has earned its reputation as</em><br /><em>industry leader by consistently meeting customer requirements for innovative technology</em><br /><em>and the highest manufacturing standards.</em><br /><br /><em>Co-founded by Lorne Trottier in 1976, Matrox has pioneered a number of innovative hardware</em><br /><em>and software solutions for an array of high-tech industries. Today, we continue to be at the</em><br /><em>forefront of cutting-edge technology, working closely with our global stakeholders to solve</em><br /><em>specific real-world issues.</em> [from https://www.matrox.com/en/about/matrox]<br /><strong><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: medium;"><br />HARDWARE</span></strong>
<ul>
<li>MTX 1632 Video RAM, 1977</li>
<li>Westinghouse CRT elevator control card 5206039H01 with MTX 1632 Video RAM</li>
<li>ALT-256**2 graphics board, 1977</li>
<li>ALT-256-AS graphics board, 1979, with two paper tapes containing
<ul>
<li><em> MATROX 8080 Graphics Package</em>, 1977</li>
<li><em> Graphics Package Demo</em>, 1977</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>CCB-7 MACS computer, 197?</li>
<li>MEGA 1/64 board, 1979</li>
<li>Alpha graphics board, 1980</li>
<li>BW-Alpha video board, 1982</li>
<li>SX-900 board, 1985</li>
<li>MIP 512 image processing board, 1985</li>
<li>PIP-512 PC frame grabber, 1985</li>
<li>PG-1281 graphics controller board, PG-1281/8/1.5M. 1986</li>
<li>MVP-AT hardware-accelerated image processing board, 1986</li>
<li>PIP-640B, 1987</li>
<li>Matrox Light Pen, 1989</li>
<li>Millennium, MGA MIL/21, 64-bit graphics card, 1993</li>
<li>Impression graphics card, 1993</li>
<li>MIL2P/4/HP video card, 1997</li>
<li>G2+/MILA/8BC/5 card, 1998</li>
<li>G400 graphics card, G4+MDH4A32G, 1999</li>
<li>PG-641 PC board, 1991</li>
<li>Marvel MM/VGA 32K TV-graphics card, 1992</li>
<li>Parhelia graphics card, 2003</li>
<li>Extio expander unit, 2005</li>
<li>Extio PCIe extender card, 2005</li>
<li>DualHead2Go graphics expansion module, 2007</li>
<li>M9140 graphics card, 2008</li>
<li>TripleHead2Go graphics expansion module, DP edition, 2011</li>
<li>TripleHead2Go graphics expansion module, digital edition, 2008</li>
<li>MURA MPX-4/4, engineering sample, 2011</li>
<li>MURA IPX, board nr. 7479, 2016</li>
</ul>
<strong><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: medium;">MANUALS, TECHNICAL LITERATURE</span></strong>
<ul>
<li>MTX-1632 Video RAM, 1977</li>
<li>ALT-256**2 graphics board -- complete technical documentation, 1977</li>
<li><em>ALT-2480 Altair-IMSAI Bus Compatible Alphanumeric Display Interface</em>, 1978(?)</li>
<li><em>MTX-256 Application Note</em>, April 1977</li>
<li><em>MLSI-512</em> -- the MTX-512 graphics family, Feb., 1978</li>
<li><em>MTX-512</em> -- graphics family of cards, 1978</li>
<li><em>MTX-A1 display and keyboard interface</em>, 1978</li>
<li><em>MLSI-2480</em> video interface, 1979</li>
<li><em>SX-900/LX-900 User Manual</em>, August 1985</li>
<li><em>PIP: Professional Image Processing for the IBM-PC</em>, 1985(?)</li>
<li><em>MAP-2000 Super Microcomputer</em>, 1986</li>
<li><em>CP-2000 Multibus CPU</em>, 1986</li>
<li><em>MB-2000 2MB board</em>, 1986</li>
<li><em>FP-2000 Multibus CPU</em>, 1986</li>
</ul>
<strong><span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: medium;">PROMOTIONAL LITERATURE, CATALOGUES, PRICE LISTS</span></strong>
<ul>
<li><em>The MATROX ALT-256 Video Board Product Description,</em> reprinted from <em>BYTE</em>, vol. 3, nr. 5, 1978</li>
<li><em>MATROX OEM Price List</em>, 1978</li>
<li><em>MATROX Microprocessor Displays</em>, Catalogue SF-1, 1978</li>
<li>MATROX product catalogue, 1982</li>
<li><em>MATROX OEM Price List</em>, 1984</li>
<li><em>MIP-512 Real-Time Image Processor</em>, 1985</li>
<li>MATROX product catalogue, 2003</li>
</ul>
Subject
The topic of the resource
<p style="text-align: center;"><img src="http://museum1.eecs.yorku.ca/www_decorations/matrox_logo.jpg" alt="matrox_logo" width="30%" height="30%" border="0" /></p>
A collection of hardware manufactured and software published by Matrox Electronics.
hardware
A computer (or a calculator), its components and
peripherals (displays, printers, pointing devices, modems, external storage devices, etc).
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Matrox MTX 1632 Video Ram
Subject
The topic of the resource
computer hardware: video hardware
Description
An account of the resource
<strong>Historical Context</strong><br />(by Z. Stachniak)<br /><br />Matrox Electronic Systems was established in Montreal in 1976 at the peak of the North American computer hobby movement and the beginning of the rapid growth of the microcomputer market. Co-founders Lorne Trottier and Branko Matić identified an opportunity to expand the microcomputing market into video interfaces, providing microcomputers with graphic display capabilities. The company's first product, Video RAM (1976), was a specialized video-display device, which interfaced with a computer system to display computer-generated alphanumeric data stored in the device's RAM. The device's success generated the revenue necessary for the development of subsequent products. Among these were the MTX-1632 Video RAM and the ALT-series video graphics controllers. With the release of these devices, Matrox pioneered the graphics card add-on market for microcomputers.<br /><br />By 1978, Matrox offered a diverse line of advanced CRT display controllers, which could be used in various combinations supported with a wide choice of display formats, character sets, TV standards, display resolutions, bus compatibility, etc. According to Matrox 1978<br />product catalogue, "Matrox displays have been used in more than 10,000 installations in every imaginable operation: from ground control displays for the Viking mission to Mars to hobby displays."<br /><br />The following year, Matrox began to supply system integrators on Wall Street with a line of financial information display products. One of them, the Quad Video, powered four monitors becoming the first single-board hardware to provide multi-display support. This groundbreaking product established Matrox as the first graphics company to provide display solutions to the financial and business markets.<br /><br />In the 1980s, the company embarked on designing and manufacturing a range of graphics products for a variety of computer bus standards. Matrox also expanded its operations to include the production of microcomputers, such as the CCB-7 MACS and the MAP-2000 Super Microcomputer. Throughout the 1990s, Matrox introduced several lines of high-quality graphics products, notably the Millennium graphics cards, while gradually shifting its focus towards specialized markets.<br /><br />In the early 1990s, the company split into three distinct divisions: Matrox Graphics, Matrox Video, and Matrox Imaging. Matrox Graphics was focused on delivering graphics solutions, Matrox Video specialized in markets for the broadcast industry and digital video editing solutions, while Matrox Imaging concentrated on component-level solutions for machine vision applications. <br /><br />By the turn of the century, Matrox emerged as a leading global digital imaging company, offering a broad spectrum of hardware choices supported with leading-edge software solutions. Its hardware and software products found applications across an extensive range of industries, spanning broadcast and media, education, enterprise, government, houses of worship, medical, military and defence, process control and utilities, security, and transportation sectors. <br /><br />In 2022, Matrox Graphics was absorbed into Matrox Video. Two years later, Matrox Imaging, was acquired by Zebra Technologies Corp. In 2024, Matrox provided this concise corporate profile:<br /><br /><em>For over 45 years, Matrox has been synonymous with technology and innovation. A market</em><br /><em>leader in designing software and hardware solutions for Pro AV/IT, video, and imaging/machine</em><br /><em>vision applications, Matrox combines engineering excellence with deep industry expertise to deliver</em><br /><em>unique solutions that help our customers achieve their goals. Matrox has earned its reputation as</em><br /><em>industry leader by consistently meeting customer requirements for innovative technology</em><br /><em>and the highest manufacturing standards.</em><br /><br /><em>Co-founded by Lorne Trottier in 1976, Matrox has pioneered a number of innovative hardware</em><br /><em>and software solutions for an array of high-tech industries. Today, we continue to be at the</em><br /><em>forefront of cutting-edge technology, working closely with our global stakeholders to solve</em><br /><em>specific real-world issues</em>. [from https://www.matrox.com/en/about/matrox]<br /><br /><strong>Matrox MTX 1632 Video RAM<br /></strong><br />Matrox MTX 1632 Video RAM, introduced in 1977, was the successor to the company's first product -- the Video RAM. As its predecessor, it was a specialized video display controller designed for use in systems that required display of alphanumeric data stored in the device's RAM. <br /><br />One of the companies that employed the MTX-1632 Video RAM was Westinghouse which used the device in one of its CRT elevator control cards (see the image of Westinghouse CRT elevator control card 5206039H01 with MTX 1632 Video RAM). <br /><br /><strong>Matrox MTX 1632 Video RAM</strong> <strong>Technical specifications</strong><br />
<ul>
<li>display: 16 lines of 32 characters, flicker free, upper/lower case,</li>
<li>refresh: no extarnal refresh,</li>
<li>data bus: bidirectional,</li>
<li>power: 5V,</li>
<li>technology: TTL compatible.</li>
</ul>
<br /><strong>Museum holdings</strong><br />
<ul>
<li>MTX 1632 Video RAM,</li>
<li>Westinghouse CRT elevator control card 5206039H01 with MTX 1632 Video RAM,</li>
<li><em>MTX-1632 Video RAM</em> technical documentation, Matrox, 1977.</li>
</ul>
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Matrox Electronic Systems
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1977
Relation
A related resource
Matrox collection