Fermi (microarchitecture)
Fermi is the codename for a graphics processing unit (GPU) microarchitecture developed by Nvidia, first released to retail in April 2010, as the successor to the Tesla microarchitecture. It was the primary microarchitecture used in the GeForce 400 series and 500 series. All desktop Fermi GPUs were manufactured in 40nm, mobile Fermi GPUs in 40nm and 28nm. Fermi is the oldest microarchitecture from Nvidia that receives support for Microsoft's rendering API Direct3D 12 feature_level 11.
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 590 of the GeForce 500-line of graphics-cards, was the final major iteration featuring the Fermi microarchitecture (GF110-351-A1).
Photo of Enrico Fermi, eponym of architecture
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 480 of the GeForce 400-line of graphics-cards; the first iteration to feature the Fermi micro-architecture (GF100-375-A3).
Die shot of the GF100 GPU found inside GeForce GTX 470 cards
Tesla (microarchitecture)
Tesla is the codename for a GPU microarchitecture developed by Nvidia, and released in 2006, as the successor to Curie microarchitecture. It was named after the pioneering electrical engineer Nikola Tesla. As Nvidia's first microarchitecture to implement unified shaders, it was used with GeForce 8 series, GeForce 9 series, GeForce 100 series, GeForce 200 series, and GeForce 300 series of GPUs, collectively manufactured in 90 nm, 80 nm, 65 nm, 55 nm, and 40 nm. It was also in the GeForce 405 and in the Quadro FX, Quadro x000, Quadro NVS series, and Nvidia Tesla computing modules.
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 295 of the GeForce 200-line of graphics-cards, was the final major iteration featuring the Tesla microarchitecture (GT200-400-B3).
Photo of Nikola Tesla, eponym of architecture
GPU NVIDIA G80
Die shot of the GT200 GPU found inside NVIDIA GeForce GTX 280 cards, based on the Tesla microarchitecture