Silicon Integrated Graphic Technologies
- Operating system support: Windows 98/Me/NT/2000/XP.
- October 31, 2002
- Windows 98/Me/NT/2000/XP
- 8.7 MB
- Operating system support: Windows 98/Me/2000/XP.
- April 21, 2003
- Windows 98/Me/2000/XP
- 9.4 MB
- March 18, 2003
- Windows 95/98/Me
- 16.0 MB
- March 17, 2003
- Windows 98/Me/2000/XP
- 9.5 MB
- March 5, 2003
- Windows (all)
- 9.5 MB
- February 13, 2003
- Windows 98/Me/2000/XP
- 14.0 MB
- February 7, 2003
- Windows 2000/XP
- 17.4 MB
- October 31, 2002
- Windows 95/98/Me
- 15.1 MB
- October 31, 2002
- Windows 2000/XP
- 16.3 MB
- October 31, 2002
- Windows 98/Me/2000/XP
- 5.1 MB
- Try out the newest version of the SiS630/SiS730 Single Chip AGP Graphics Driver for Windows 98/Me/2000/XP.
- July 30, 2002
- Windows 98/Me/2000/XP
- 6.1 MB
- Check out the latest version of the SiS630 Single Chip VGA Graphics Driver for Windows XP.
- April 30, 2002
- Windows XP
- 514 KB
- Try out the newest version of the SiS630 Single Chip VGA Graphics Driver for Windows 95.
- April 26, 2002
- Windows 95
- 646 KB
- Try out the newest update for the SiS630 Single Chip VGA Graphics Driver for Windows NT.
- April 26, 2002
- Windows NT
- 5.4 MB
- Try out the latest update for the SiS630 Single Chip VGA Graphics Driver for Windows 98.
- April 26, 2002
- Windows 98
- 654 KB
- Check out the latest version of the SiS630 Single Chip VGA Graphics Driver for Windows 2000.
- April 26, 2002
- Windows 2000
- 5.4 MB
- Try out the newest version of the SiS630/SiS730 Single Chip AGP Graphics Driver for Windows 98/Me/2000/XP.
- February 12, 2002
- Windows 98/Me/2000/XP
- 6.7 MB
Silicon Integrated Graphics
I have a Clevo CO W76S laptop, with a graphic card from SIS (Silicon Integrated Systems) Mirage 3, and a wireless board from R ealtek RTL 8187B. It turns out that this computer, perfectly capable to run Windows 7 smoothly, cannot run Windows 10. Includes integrated UDMA66 IDE controller. Mainboards using the SiS 530 were positioned as cheap office platforms and paired often with low-cost chips from Intel competitors, such as the AMD K6 series or Cyrix 6x86. The graphics controller had Direct3D 6.0 and OpenGL support, although it was a very low-performance product for 3D acceleration. Silicon and Software, Integrated for Superior Performance. The synergy between our silicon and software means consumers can experience increased CPU performance for gaming, improved AI performance for content creation, and encoding performance for streaming and sharing. Silicon Graphics, Inc. (stylized as SiliconGraphics before 1999, later rebranded SGI, historically known as Silicon Graphics Computer Systems or SGCS) was an American high-performance computing manufacturer, producing computer hardware and software.