Radeon radeon 6.14.99 is a graphics processor. This product is part of the Radeon series and is available from ASUS, Gigabyte, MSI, AMD, Sapphire, ATI, XFX, HIS, Power Color, Palit, Diamond, and GeCube. The Radeon radeon 6.14.99 has been tested via the Phoronix Test Suite in the configurations listed below.
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mint - Tests on LinuxMint 12, AMD E-450 APU, Gallium 0.4 on AMD PALM
computetional - Tests on Ubuntu 11.10, AMD Phenom II X4 B97, Gallium 0.4 on AMD RS880, Acer RS880M05
rob-7839-4126-24592 - Tests on Fedora 15, Intel Core i7-2600, Gallium 0.4 on AMD BARTS, Apple Mac-942B59F58194171B
mikey-openarena - Tests on Fedora 15, Intel Core i7-2600K, GeForce GTX 560 Ti, ASUS P8P67 LE, Intel Pentium 4 2.40GHz, ATI Radeon IGP 330M
mikey-render-bench - Tests on Fedora 15, Intel Core i7-2600K, GeForce GTX 560 Ti, ASUS P8P67 LE, Intel Pentium 4 2.40GHz, ATI Radeon IGP 330M
qgears2-xrender - Tests on Fedora 15, Intel Core i7-2600K, GeForce GTX 560 Ti, ASUS P8P67 LE, Intel Pentium 4 2.40GHz, ATI Radeon IGP 330M
gears-opengl - Tests on Fedora 15, Intel Core i7-2600K, GeForce GTX 560 Ti, ASUS P8P67 LE, Intel Pentium 4 2.40GHz, ATI Radeon IGP 330M
gtkperf-test - Tests on Fedora 15, Intel Core i7-2600K, GeForce GTX 560 Ti, ASUS P8P67 LE, Intel Pentium 4 2.40GHz, ATI Radeon IGP 330M
mikey-render-bench - Tests on Fedora 15, Intel Core i7-2600K, GeForce GTX 560 Ti, ASUS P8P67 LE, Intel Pentium M 1600MHz, ATI Radeon RV250
gtkperf-test - Tests on Fedora 15, Intel Core i7-2600K, GeForce GTX 560 Ti, ASUS P8P67 LE, Intel Pentium M 1600MHz, ATI Radeon RV250
qgears2-xrender - Tests on Fedora 15, Intel Core i7-2600K, GeForce GTX 560 Ti, ASUS P8P67 LE, Intel Pentium M 1600MHz, ATI Radeon RV250
gears-opengl - Tests on Fedora 15, Intel Core i7-2600K, GeForce GTX 560 Ti, ASUS P8P67 LE, Intel Pentium M 1600MHz, ATI Radeon RV250
mikey-openarena - Tests on Fedora 15, Intel Core i7-2600K, GeForce GTX 560 Ti, ASUS P8P67 LE, Gallium 0.4 on AMD CEDAR, ASUS P8Z68 DELUXE
mikey-render-bench - Tests on Fedora 15, Intel Core i7-2600K, GeForce GTX 560 Ti, ASUS P8P67 LE, Gallium 0.4 on AMD CEDAR, ASUS P8Z68 DELUXE
The Impact Of Radeon DRM On Linux 3.3, DRM-Next: Recently I showed off some Intel DRM benchmarks from the Linux 3.3 kernel along with what will be in the Linux 3.4 kernel via drm-next. These results indicated some performance improvements on the side of Intel Sandy Bridge hardware, but how do the new kernel and Linux 3.4 impact the discrete Radeon graphics? Here's some benchmarks covering that side of the graphics table.
Radeon Gallium3D With Mesa 8.0: Goes Up & Down: Now that I've shared eight good features and eight bad traits of Mesa 8.0, which is the open-source graphics hardware library that's now supportive of OpenGL 3.0, it's time to begin looking closer at the performance. In this article are benchmarks of ATI/AMD Radeon graphics cards spanning five generations to show how the Mesa 8.0 performance compares to the previous release (Mesa 7.11) and the proprietary Catalyst driver.
Why The Radeon Gallium3D Performance Is Down: After yesterday's article about the Grinch that stole the Radeon Gallium3D performance, here's three offending commits since Mesa 7.10 that are causing the open-source Radeon Gallium3D driver to run slower than it should.
AMD Radeon HD 6450: While we have reviewed several graphics cards from AMD's Radeon HD 6000 series, one of the GPUs in this latest family that we have not benchmarked previously is the Radeon HD 6450. The AMD Radeon HD 6450 is the lowest-end offering in this family, but how's its performance relative to other low-end AMD and NVIDIA parts? In this review we have a PowerColor Radeon HD 6450 1GB and are seeing how well this graphics card works under Ubuntu Linux.
AMD A8-3850 With Radeon HD 6550D: Last month AMD officially launched the A-Series "Llano" Fusion APUs to much fan-fare with significantly better computational and graphics performance over the E-Series Fusion APUs and all around the new hardware being a compelling solution. On launch-day we delivered AMD A8-3500M benchmarks as we managed to procure remote access to one of the AMD Llano systems from a third-party, and we also delivered benchmarks of the Radeon HD 6620G that are found on that APU.
Sapphire Radeon HD 6950: Have you been wondering how the AMD Radeon HD 6900 "Cayman" graphics cards are running under Linux? After all, Cayman is quite different from the rest of the Radeon HD 6000 "Northern Island" GPUs and its open-source Linux support came much later.
Sapphire Radeon HD 6770: Continuing to ensure that Linux benchmarks on the latest AMD Radeon HD graphics processors are available, the kind people at Sapphire have sent over another Radeon HD 6000 series graphics card. After previously reviewing the Sapphire Radeon HD 6570 and Sapphire Radeon HD 6870, up now is the Sapphire Radeon HD 6770.
Sapphire Radeon HD 6570: AMD has expanded its Radeon HD 6000 series family, with the launch this week of the mid-range Radeon HD 6570 and Radeon HD 6670 graphics cards. We were sent over a Sapphire Radeon HD 6570 in advance, but as it did not arrive until Monday, the results are only now available.
ATI Radeon HD 5450 On Linux: While AMD soon will be introducing the Radeon HD 6000 graphics cards, there is still plenty of life left to the Radeon HD 5000 series especially for those interested in open-source support with the Evergreen GPUs finally being supported by the open-source driver stack complete with OpenGL acceleration via a Mesa driver and this support will continue to mature before there is the same level of support for the next-generation Southern Island GPUs in the open-source world.
AMD Radeon HD 4290 On Linux: Last week we delivered benchmarks of the AMD Athlon II X3 425 processor running Ubuntu 10.04 LTS while this week we are continuing in benchmarks from this triple-core budget processor as we try out its gaming performance when paired with an AMD 890GX motherboard boasting integrated Radeon HD 4290 graphics.
ATI Radeon KMS vs. UMS With Ubuntu 10.04: Earlier this week we published comparative benchmarks of Mandriva, PCLinuxOS, Ubuntu, and openSUSE. In the discussion that followed, a number of people requested a set of tests that compare the performance of the ATI Radeon Linux graphics driver stack with kernel mode-setting (KMS) vs.
AMD Radeon HD 5750/5770: In late September AMD had introduced the Radeon HD 5850 and Radeon HD 5870 graphics cards as the successors to the Radeon HD 4850 and Radeon HD 4870, respectively. These graphics cards, which are part of the Evergreen GPU family, have been performing quite nicely according to reports, but we have yet to test either of these Cypress graphics cards under Linux.