MoMA Eve: Difference between revisions

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This operated in conjunction with a 200-MHz [[S3 Chrome|S3 Graphics UniChrome Pro]] [[graphics card|Integrated Graphics Processor]]<ref name=”Extremetech Article”/> and 128&nbsp;MB of DDR266 [[SDRAM]].<ref name=”Extremetech Article”/> A 1.8″ 20&nbsp;GB [[Hard disk|Hard drive]] capable of 133&nbsp;MB/s was used for storage.<ref name=”Extremetech Article”/><ref name=”Official VIA site”/>

This operated in conjunction with a 200-MHz [[S3 Chrome|S3 Graphics UniChrome Pro]] [[graphics card|Integrated Graphics Processor]]<ref name=”Extremetech Article”/> and 128&nbsp;MB of DDR266 [[SDRAM]].<ref name=”Extremetech Article”/> A 1.8″ 20&nbsp;GB [[Hard disk|Hard drive]] capable of 133&nbsp;MB/s was used for storage.<ref name=”Extremetech Article”/><ref name=”Official VIA site”/>

The system used VIA Vinyl Audio, supporting six channels. The system had a 1/8″ jack for Headphones and one 1/8 jack for Microphone.<ref name=”Official VIA site”/> The system also had a 1/8″ TV out jack.<ref name=”Official VIA site”/> The system included 2 USB 2.0 Type A ports<ref name=”Official VIA site”/> The system was powered by two Prismatic [[Lithium-ion battery|Lithium-ion batteries]] with two slots in the console, and were [[Hot swapping|hot swappable]].<ref name=”Official VIA site”/>

The system used VIA Vinyl Audio, supporting six channels. The system had a 1/8″ jack for Headphones and one 1/8 jack for Microphone.<ref name=”Official VIA site”/> The system also had a 1/8″ TV out jack.<ref name=”Official VIA site”/> The system included 2 USB 2.0 Type A ports<ref name=”Official VIA site”/> The system was powered by two [[-ion battery|Lithium-ion batteries]] with two slots in the console, and were [[Hot swapping|hot swappable]].<ref name=”Official VIA site”/>

==References==

==References==


Revision as of 07:56, 8 February 2026

Handheld gaming console

The MoMA Eve was a handheld gaming console presented by Via at E3 2004.[5] It was supposed to play PC games as well as games designed for it. The player would have had to purchase a SIM Card to play purchased games on it. The buttons look like the buttons on an average video game controller with a D-pad on the left, four action buttons on the right, one Start button in the middle, and two analog sticks. It had a 533 MHz processor, a 20 GB hard drive for games and movies, Wi-Fi, and a CF slot.[6] It also had TV-OUT.[6] The console encountered a trademark issue in mid-2004.[7] The system was never released and is considered vaporware.

Hardware

The system used a 533-MHz Eden-N CPU,[4] with an FSB operating at 133-MHz.[4]
This operated in conjunction with a 200-MHz S3 Graphics UniChrome Pro Integrated Graphics Processor[4] and 128 MB of DDR266 SDRAM.[4] A 1.8″ 20 GB Hard drive capable of 133 MB/s was used for storage.[4][1]

The system used VIA Vinyl Audio, supporting six channels. The system had a 1/8″ jack for Headphones and one 1/8 jack for Microphone.[1] The system also had a 1/8″ TV out jack.[1] The system included 2 USB 2.0 Type A ports[1] The system was powered by two prismatic Lithium-ion batteries with two slots in the console, and were hot swappable.[1]

References

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