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  1. The GE-200 series was a family of small mainframe computers of the 1960s, built by General Electric (GE). GE marketing called the line Compatibles/200 (GE-205/215/225/235). The GE-210 of 1960 was not compatible with the rest of the 200 series.

  2. Fecha de lanzamiento. 16 de junio de 2008 (15 años) Datos técnicos. Microarquitectura. Tesla. [ editar datos en Wikidata] La serie GeForce 200 es una serie de unidades de procesamiento de gráficos GeForce basadas en Tesla desarrolladas por Nvidia .

  3. GeForce 200 series. Nvidia GeForce GTX 295 released in January 2009; the flagship unit of the 200 series. This particular model manufactured by NVIDIA board-partner, Inno3D. The GeForce 200 series is a series of Tesla -based GeForce graphics processing units developed by Nvidia .

  4. GE-200 series. Learn about supporting IT History Society. Description of Resource: The GE-200 series was a family of small mainframe computers of the 1960s, built by General Electric. The main machine in the line was the GE-225. It used a 20-bit word, of which 13 bits could be used for an address.

  5. academia-lab.com › enciclopedia › serie-ge-200Serie GE-200 _ AcademiaLab

    La serie GE-200 fue una familia de pequeñas computadoras centrales de la década de 1960, construida por General Electric (GE). El marketing de GE llamó a la línea Compatibles/200 (GE-205/215/225/235). El GE-210 de 1960 no era compatible con el resto de la serie 200. Modelos de la serie 200. La máquina principal de la línea fue la GE-225 (1961).

  6. The GE-200 series was a family of small mainframe computers of the 1960s, built by General Electric. GE marketing called the line Compatibles/200.[1] The main machine in the line was the GE-225. It used a 20-bit word, of which 13 bits could be used for an address.

  7. GE-400 systems had a word length of 24 bits which could contain binary data, four six-bit BCD characters, or four signed decimal digits. GE-400 systems could have up to 32,768 words (132K characters) of magnetic-core memory with a cycle time of 2.7 microseconds (435) or 5.1 microseconds (425). The systems supported up to eight channels for ...