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A co-processor dedicated to blitting is known as a Blitter chip.
In the 19th century, the name was spelled Blitter Lees, with a space between the two words.
The Blitter was a 64-bit triangle rendering engine.
The Blitter and Copper are also contained here.
Bobs: Taken from the Amiga, where they are Blitter Objects.
The Blitter, a Bitmap image manipulator.
The GPU and Blitter were the rendering engine for 3D graphics.
Regular editorial features included Interface; News, Letters, The Blitter End.
The rest of the chipset remains unchanged, as do the Blitter and Copper coprocessors in Alice, still working on 16-bit data.
For now, he has created the Blitter bitmap font (free for Mac and PC).
No Blitter, but supports very fast data transfers via "VGA latch" registers.
It is believed that the village's original name might have derived from the kin of a Frankish settler named Blatmar or Blitter.
A Bob (contraction of Blitter object) was a graphical element (GEL) first used by the Amiga computer.
His brother, former MIT scientist Brian Alexander Whitman and co-founder of The Echo Nest, is also an electronic musician and sound artist under name Blitter.
All MEGA mainboard have a PLCC socket for the Blitter chip and some early models did not include the BLiTTER chip.
The Blitter in the Commodore Amiga is an early graphics processor capable of combining 3 source streams of 16 component bit vectors in 256 ways to produce an output stream consisting of 16 component bit vectors.
The Blitter is capable of copying blocks of display data, or any arbitrary data in the on-board memory, at high speed with various raster operations as well as drawing pixel perfect lines and filling outlined polygons, while freeing the CPU for concurrent tasks.
BOB, more often BLOB or 'Blitter Object', popular name for graphics objects drawn with the dedicated graphics blitter in the Amiga series of computers, which was available in addition to its true hardware sprites.
The Game Developer UK Competition, organized by Scottish Enterprise in collaboration with the Scottish Games Alliance, Sony and Edge in 1998, accepted Net Yaroze entries; the overall winner was Chris Chadwick for his game Blitter Boy: Operation Monster Mall.