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Tech report shows off Asus line of new P65 motherboards That Sabertooth is ridiculous. However I do like that intel NIC are available on top tier boards and the same top tier are all USB 3.0 (as in every port).
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# ? Nov 15, 2010 17:42 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 09:14 |
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Skilleddk posted:Do you guys think I'll be able to attach my Cooler Master V8 to a LGA 1155 motherboard? It's fine on my LGA 775 for now, and my friend used it on LGA 1156 before. I moved my old Ninja cooler from a 775 board to a 1156 one. I took off the pins on the heatsink and used nylon screws and bolts to attach it to the board. If the holes line up, you can reused it. quote:In addition to lavishing users with overclocking extras, this ROG board taps the Gigabit Ethernet networking Intel builds into its core-logic chipsets. Most motherboard makers ignore this "free" GigE controller in favor of standalone Realtek chips, which we've long suspected are cheaper to implement. Asus confirmed that to be true, but it's nonetheless committed to using Intel networking solutions on more of its motherboards. HOORAY!
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# ? Nov 15, 2010 18:17 |
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SRQ posted:I want to say I'm going to play it smart and keep my current i5 750 build, but I know in my heart I'm gonna blow a cashwad on this. It'll still use the same DDR3 ram though, please? Using realtek Gbit instead of the Intel one makes no sense to me and mildly frustrates me. But won't deflect me from grabbing the P67A-UD3x or P67A-UD4.
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# ? Nov 15, 2010 18:20 |
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WhyteRyce posted:I moved my old Ninja cooler from a 775 board to a 1156 one. I took off the pins on the heatsink and used nylon screws and bolts to attach it to the board. If the holes line up, you can reused it. I don't know how reliable a Wikipedia article linked to VR Zone is, but it appears its hole comparable with 1366. A few motherboard makers figured out how to use hole compatible 775 HSF on 1156 motherboards with the same hardware. It does require extra engineering and some "high level OC capability" concessions, but its doable.
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# ? Nov 15, 2010 19:47 |
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Even with the integrated Intel MAC, you need a PHY like a 82577. Controllers like the 82574 are standalone PCIe-interfacing chips. Excited about onboard Intel though. Always been an Asus guy, will continue to be now. Think I'll pass on the flak jacket though.
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# ? Nov 15, 2010 19:51 |
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I really was going to try to extend the life of my E3110 (already overcoocked) but I think I'll be a day one buyer. I've always been an Asus man, and they pretty much sealed the deal that I will continue to be. Farewell Wolfdale, enjoy your life as a media server!
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# ? Nov 15, 2010 23:44 |
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Is there a comparable thread for info on Bulldozer, or does nobody care enough to make one? edit: i looked a few pages back but didn't see one... so don't flame me yet
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# ? Nov 15, 2010 23:57 |
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There isn't but you could probably just discuss it here, there isn't much brand loyalty in SHSC. Most of us are interested in both platforms anyways I would wager, if for no other reason than staying up on things.
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 00:43 |
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BangersInMyKnickers posted:The E6600 has had a good service life though. Mine has been dutifully chugging away for 4 years now, it's really not surprising that my next upgrade is going to involve a total platform overhaul. In hindsight it really amazes me how much hardware requirements for applications stagnated over that period of time. Between purging of old hardware and greater adoption of .NET and the overhead it costs, they seem to be going up in earnest for the first time in years. I'm sitting on the same thing. By March I'll have had this computer for 4 years, and the only thing I've replace has been the graphics card because it stopped working. Sandy Bridge is coming out at a good time to look for an upgrade.
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 01:30 |
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Put me in the group of people upgrading to Sandy Bridge from a Core 2 Duo (Wolfdale E8400). Unfortunately, I got one of those C0 Wolfdale chips so I only managed to squeeze out a 400MHz overclock that is stable. I'm hoping that doesn't happen with Sandy Bridge because I plan on getting one with the unlocked multiplier, probably the i5-2500K. When they are launched presumably in January, what will the supply be? Will they only trickle out a little at a time or will a bunch of them be dumped on the market and therefore be widely available?
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 02:55 |
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Alereon posted:. This is probably a direct response to Sandy Bridge's on-die graphics not supporting OpenCL, Can someone named JawnV6 confirm this because a certain architect suggested otherwise when he was lording over us how our 'other' graphics solution got poo poo canned
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 05:02 |
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feld posted:Is there a comparable thread for info on Bulldozer, or does nobody care enough to make one? I think they're doing a demo or something either late this month or early next so you should have more news then on it.
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 05:44 |
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Raptop posted:Can someone named JawnV6 confirm this because a certain architect suggested otherwise when he was lording over us how our 'other' graphics solution got poo poo canned Posters on the anandtech message boards are talking about how SB will do OpenCL, so http://news.cnet.com/8301-13924_3-20016302-64.html quote:Thomas Piazza, an Intel fellow and director of graphics architecture for the Intel Architecture Group, said that Sandy Bridge-based chips in their current implementation will not support DirectX 11, a Microsoft technology for accelerating multimedia and games. Currently, Sandy Bridge supports DirectX 10.1 and OpenCL 1.1--the latter used on Apple's Mac operating systems, according to Piazza. Certain graphics chips from Advanced Micro Devices' ATI unit and Nvidia already support DirectX 11. WhyteRyce fucked around with this message at 06:03 on Nov 16, 2010 |
# ? Nov 16, 2010 06:00 |
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Looks like the numbers for AMD are out on both anandtech and techreport. http://www.anandtech.com/show/4023/the-brazos-performance-preview-amd-e350-benchmarked http://techreport.com/articles.x/19981 I like the techreport comparison as it compares laptop to laptop performance and covers more relevant cpu types though a core-ix low volt would be a nice addition.
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 08:18 |
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yup. Top brazos is barely faster in CPU than atom, GPU is a good deal faster than current intel IGPs, but still very slow. Irrelevant to me, searching for a market in general. If Intel gets a budget sandy out for the $400-500 laptop market it'll destroy brazos all the way around (as long as it keeps the 12EU config).
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 09:28 |
movax posted:On topic, I can't wait, an i7-2500 is in my future. My E6600 is choking miserably on CoD Black Ops, and I'm beginning to think it was my E6600 bottlenecking a ton of games, not a 8800GTS. (Just bought a GTX460, and I think the E6600 is bottlenecking it...)
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 09:33 |
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ilkhan posted:Irrelevant to me, searching for a market in general. If Intel gets a budget sandy out for the $400-500 laptop market it'll destroy brazos all the way around (as long as it keeps the 12EU config). SB in netbook format would have be downclocked massively on the GPU and CPU. If they kept the 12EU + stock clock config. for the GPU it'd probably be about as good as Brazos's GPU, but they won't be able to. So a SB netbook would probably have a faster CPU but significantly slower GPU, so it'll likely perform worse for most games. It'd also probably still use more power and cost more as well. ULV SB will probably be closer to $600 to start, probably much higher at launch. Brazos based netbooks will probably be around $500-400. Also Bobcat's CPU is much better at single threaded stuff then Atom, almost double the performance there. So "barely better than Atom" is probably a stretch.
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 10:09 |
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PC LOAD LETTER posted:?? Which starts to make you question the point of a netbook at that price point. Sure it's small, but it's more expensive than a bottom dollar 15" notebook.
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 19:22 |
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The gaming numbers look impressive (comparatively) but those Anandtech numbers still look like poo poo overall. You can probably play your older games fine, but then I still wonder the point of playing games on a netbook.
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 19:42 |
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WhyteRyce posted:The gaming numbers look impressive (comparatively) but those Anandtech numbers still look like poo poo overall. You can probably play your older games fine, but then I still wonder the point of playing games on a netbook. My older GMA950 Atom netbook chokes on pretty much any web video, yet I chose it for battery life. If AMD tells me I can actually watch House on Hulu if I want to yet still have 8+ hours of battery life when I'm just typing, I'm interested.
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 20:04 |
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Won't the next line of Atom netbooks have better video decoding as well? edit-I don't know about Flash though. WhyteRyce fucked around with this message at 20:17 on Nov 16, 2010 |
# ? Nov 16, 2010 20:09 |
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PopeOnARope posted:Which starts to make you question the point of a netbook at that price point. Sure it's small, but it's more expensive than a bottom dollar 15" notebook. Portability factors - especially battery life - are often bigger concerns than performance. WhyteRyce posted:The gaming numbers look impressive (comparatively) but those Anandtech numbers still look like poo poo overall. You can probably play your older games fine, but then I still wonder the point of playing games on a netbook. The point of putting better graphics in low-end systems isn't so you can play games. People have already touched on video decoding, but an accelerated desktop is likely to play a much more significant role in the near future, as well. IE, Firefox, and Chrome are all moving towards hardware acceleration, and letting the GPU take some of the load off the CPU will allow the system as a whole to get away with a less powerful, less power-hungry CPU.
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 20:37 |
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Space Gopher posted:
That may be the point of what AMD did, but there are still people who talk about playing games in the comments of any netbook related review or article. It seems like every week I've had to talk my dad down from buying a near-$500 ION netbook, even after he bought an ipad. It's probably my complaint with netbooks in general. I liked the concept of a cheap, near-disposable computer which handles most of my day-to-day poo poo (poor video playback is a sore spot), and then people wanted to go and beef them up to the price of a low-end laptop or near a ULV laptop. WhyteRyce fucked around with this message at 20:50 on Nov 16, 2010 |
# ? Nov 16, 2010 20:45 |
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Anything special in the Sandy Bridge LGA2011 over the LGA1156 one? Apart from more PCIe lanes and quad channel memory? --edit: Combat Pretzel fucked around with this message at 21:12 on Nov 16, 2010 |
# ? Nov 16, 2010 20:55 |
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Combat Pretzel posted:Anything special in the Sandy Bridge LGA2011 over the LGA1156 one? Apart from more PCIe lanes and quad channel memory?
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 21:07 |
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WhyteRyce posted:That may be the point of what AMD did, but there are still people who talk about playing games in the comments of any netbook related review or article. It seems like every week I've had to talk my dad down from buying a near-$500 ION netbook, even after he bought an ipad. Originally netbooks were something that ran Linux, was slow with a tiny low res screen and had aobtu no storage. They were only usable for browsing and word processing. Now they are nearly full fledged computers and can often outperform larger laptops from similar pricepoints in most areas but raw cpu power, and definitely have better battery life.
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 21:11 |
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Combat Pretzel posted:Anything special in the Sandy Bridge LGA2011 over the LGA1156 one? Apart from more PCIe lanes and quad channel memory? Multiprocessor support, if you buy Xeons. In the consumer sector, it's likely to be a good replacement for LGA1366: theoretically more capable, but practically very little performance improvement. Combat Pretzel posted:Also, with apparent support for things like OpenCL, does that mean that games can actually use the graphics unit for physics? Sandy Bridge's IGP doesn't support OpenCL or DX11 compute shaders, so no. If you're talking about OpenCL/DirectCompute-based game physics in general, yes, although I wouldn't expect much to show up for a while. Requiring hardware physics acceleration would lock out the vast majority of the market, which isn't good for sales. We might see some physics-based graphical effects in the near term (similar to what Mirror's Edge and Batman: AA did with Nvidia's Physx acceleration), but major titles that use physics acceleration to actually change gameplay are still a long ways off.
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 21:21 |
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http://hothardware.com/Reviews/AMD-Zacate-E350-Processor-Performance-Preview/?page=8 Data from a third site comparing power draw from the wall of the e-350 vs atom/dual atom. It looks a lot better than the previous two sites under this context. "In all cases the display was not factored into the power draw [...] In short, AMD's Brazos platform and their Zacate processor consume significantly less power than a dual core Atom/Ion2 solution at idle and under load. In addition, at idle, Zacate even consumes a lot less power than a standard single core Atom design." http://www.pcper.com/article.php?aid=1039&type=expert&pid=8 4th site seems to show the same power consumption numbers, including a celeron su2300+ion combo. Exciting from a cheap, mobility perspective. I'm curious enough to want to visit some stores and test out atoms/ulv's for a performance comparison/expectation experience.
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 21:51 |
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DoobieKeebler posted:http://hothardware.com/Reviews/AMD-Zacate-E350-Processor-Performance-Preview/?page=8 The issue with these numbers is that they're using desktop parts (except for the Aspire 1551, which isn't really a battery life champion). The "standard single core Atom design" is closest to a typical netbook platform - but one from the GMA950 era, when battery life wasn't anything to write home about. Zacate certainly has potential, but I'd be interested to see some apples-to-apples comparisons before we declare it the second coming of mobile Jesus.
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# ? Nov 16, 2010 22:35 |
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El Bandit posted:It was definitely the 8800GTS. I have an E6750 and it runs everything pretty well with a 4890 (except Blops, but that's because it's a poorly optimised piece of poo poo) - I had a GTS 320MB before and games released two years ago were starting to struggle. Well, that makes me feel a little better. Little soldier will live on as my main CPU until February or so!
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# ? Nov 17, 2010 05:12 |
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WhyteRyce posted:That may be the point of what AMD did, but there are still people who talk about playing games in the comments of any netbook related review or article. The idea of an ultraportable secondary machine for light MMO use is pretty appealing to people who play stuff like WoW. Not something to do hardcore raiding from, but maybe check the auction house or do a little questing with an alt while sitting on the couch/at the breakfast table/on your coffee break at work. Blizzard offers a service for smartphones to remotely access the ingame auction house, so there must be some demand for "take it with you" game access.
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# ? Nov 17, 2010 05:35 |
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BGrifter posted:The idea of an ultraportable secondary machine for light MMO use is pretty appealing to people who play stuff like WoW. Not something to do hardcore raiding from, but maybe check the auction house or do a little questing with an alt while sitting on the couch/at the breakfast table/on your coffee break at work. Yeah I thought about WOW but still wasn't impressed with the numbers I saw on Anandtech. But it didn't occur to me that people would use it for light check-up type work.
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# ? Nov 17, 2010 06:06 |
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Has there been anything stating if the cooler mounting holes are the same as 1156/1366? I was thinking about picking up a Corsair H50 which works with my current LGA775 as well as 1156/1366. If the mounting points are the same, I would go ahead and get it, but I don't want to spend the money on a nice cooler and have it not fit within 3 months
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# ? Nov 17, 2010 16:36 |
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KKKLIP ART posted:Has there been anything stating if the cooler mounting holes are the same as 1156/1366? I was thinking about picking up a Corsair H50 which works with my current LGA775 as well as 1156/1366. If the mounting points are the same, I would go ahead and get it, but I don't want to spend the money on a nice cooler and have it not fit within 3 months
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# ? Nov 17, 2010 17:12 |
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I'm currentlu posting from a netbook with an atom and intel graphics inside. The video output sucks , i cannot have dual view , only cloning , cannot watching high definition movies/youtube is very laggy , gif rendering problem (im not sure whether this is related or not ). If AMD comes out with something that can do all that and at a lower price then I'm sold !
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# ? Nov 17, 2010 18:38 |
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Of all the issues to complain about on Atom those are not them (well, maybe HD youtube, but even on my desktop I don't really find enough videos on YT that are both 720p and that I care to watch in high quality to worry about it): dual-view works absolutely fine, 720p video plays well with CoreAVC, and I've never had issues with gif rendering across multiple browsers. Sounds like you need to update your drivers?
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# ? Nov 17, 2010 18:59 |
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Yeah, I had dual view running on my old Aspire One with GMA950. Used the Intel reference drivers instead of the original Acer ones. Worked like a beaut with two different resolutions. Same thing with 720p though. I could view 480p in flash embeds with occasional stuttering though that could have been connection related. 720p in MPC-HC but that was hit or miss. Never figured out why and sold it anyhow.
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# ? Nov 17, 2010 20:30 |
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WhyteRyce posted:Won't the next line of Atom netbooks have better video decoding as well? Intel is advising OEMs to use a broadcomm chip to help flash video decoding. What IS interesting and most people will look over is AMD will be at every price point with OpenCL support, something that Intel has been ignoring for quite a while. (Perhaps they should of focused on that instead of x86 in the smart phone) If AMD can give the "Mac OS experience" to apple at all price points in the x86 arena, then this can be a small step forward for AMD. incoherent fucked around with this message at 03:43 on Nov 24, 2010 |
# ? Nov 18, 2010 00:45 |
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Sandybridge definately supports OpenCL
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# ? Nov 18, 2010 23:22 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 09:14 |
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Good news! Based on leaked Sandy Bridge pricing from Sweden that SemiAccurate posted, the multiplier-unlocked K-series CPUs won't be significantly more expensive than the regular version. The Core i5 2500 is $257 while the i5 2500K is $270, a difference of only around 5%. For the Core i7 2600/2600K the price is $363, or $387 unlocked. These are Swedish prices not counting tax and converted to USD, so take that as you will.
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# ? Nov 24, 2010 03:14 |