Matrox is celebrating its anniversary today. The Canadian company was founded on January 17, 1976, which means today marks its 50th year. Historically, Matrox gained most recognition thanks to its Millenium series graphics cards. This was before the advent of 3D accelerators. When 3D cards began to appear on the market, Matrox couldn’t compete with 3dfx. At that time, computers often had two adapters installed: Matrox for 2D and 3dfx for 3D.
Later, Nvidia and ATI entered the market, and while Matrox attempted to establish itself in the new market environment, it was unsuccessful. Fortunately, the company managed to pivot its business without filing for bankruptcy or being acquired, moving into corporate, professional, and industrial solutions. The release of Matrox’s Parhelia card was essentially its last attempt in the consumer GPU market. Despite having the market’s most complex chip at the time, Parhelia couldn’t compete against Radeon 8500 and GeForce 4 Ti 4200.

Today, Matrox thrives in providing video wall solutions and IP video technology, which serve various industries from broadcasting to manufacturing. Recently, their focus has been on enhancing video encoding and decoding capabilities, providing more efficient and versatile solutions for high-quality video streaming and processing. This shift has allowed Matrox to establish a strong presence in the B2B space, aligning innovation with emerging industrial standards.