... is probably because the G550 is a cut-down version of the G800.
(the following is all speculation)
There were rumors that the G450 and G800 chips were pin-compatible - and eventually marketing probably decided that making the 128-bit DDR G800 did not provide enough performance to compete.
Hence Matrox used the G800 core chip in a new 64-bit PCB to keep costs low - it looks like a single head G550 would actually be cheaper to make than a G450, hence allowing Matrox to sell an OEM product while maintaining profitability.
Basically Matrox decided to be kings of 2D, not 3D. Which appears to be a lot more profitable in the long haul, given what happened to a previous king of 3D...
(the following is all speculation)
There were rumors that the G450 and G800 chips were pin-compatible - and eventually marketing probably decided that making the 128-bit DDR G800 did not provide enough performance to compete.
Hence Matrox used the G800 core chip in a new 64-bit PCB to keep costs low - it looks like a single head G550 would actually be cheaper to make than a G450, hence allowing Matrox to sell an OEM product while maintaining profitability.
Basically Matrox decided to be kings of 2D, not 3D. Which appears to be a lot more profitable in the long haul, given what happened to a previous king of 3D...
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