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Hopefully in the upcoming reviews they'll reveal how far you can overclock the K chips on air cooling. Wasn't there a rumor floating around that they overclocked an engineering sample to 4.9GHz on air cooling?
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# ? Dec 26, 2010 22:29 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 09:42 |
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I think someone did on the xtremesystems forums. But that was at high volts you wouldn't want to use 24/7. Still, its very impressive and hopefully means most chips should do 4-4.2 without breaking a sweat
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# ? Dec 26, 2010 22:42 |
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Yea this guy got a engineering sample. He posts at XS all the time and got his sample to a little over 5Ghz. Intel also demoed a overclocked system at 4.9Ghz with a stock heatsink running Cinebench before him though. Supposedly you don't need high volts to OC them either, but we'll have to wait and see because all we have right now are ES screens on random sites to go by. If you run stuff at stock and already have a Core i3/5/7 SB really isn't worth upgrading for performance wise. If you overclock and/or have an older system it should be quite an upgrade though. PC LOAD LETTER fucked around with this message at 22:58 on Dec 26, 2010 |
# ? Dec 26, 2010 22:54 |
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Excursus posted:It's being launched January 5th, so I guess that's when the official reviews from Anand etc. will come out. I know this is the wrong thread, but when is Bulldozer's launch and/or anyone know what they're going to leak around the 5th to try to keep people waiting? I've been sitting on cash for a new computer for almost 3 months now thanks to Sandy Bridge.
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# ? Dec 26, 2010 23:09 |
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I just noticed that UEFI doesn't seem to be mandatory with the Sandy Bridges. At least the first mainboard I checked on Gigabyte's site mentions a regular Award BIOS.
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# ? Dec 26, 2010 23:21 |
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I'm waiting for reviews but i've got around 550€ ready to replace my old C2D with one of these new SB CPUs with new MB/RAM. i2600k looks like it's going to be around 300€ here which doesn't really seem worth it though, compared to 200€ i2500k.
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# ? Dec 26, 2010 23:24 |
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If you do gaming/internet those extra 4 threads the i7 2600K gets you really aren't gonna do much for you. The i5 2500K would the the "sweet spot" price/performance wise of a decent number of cores (4 of em') and the high clock speed OC'ing will get you. Also there was a review posted on the previous page...
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# ? Dec 26, 2010 23:48 |
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Chuu posted:I know this is the wrong thread, but when is Bulldozer's launch and/or anyone know what they're going to leak around the 5th to try to keep people waiting? Launch is scheduled for April, but I can't see it being worth another 4 months wait. If you're really hurting for an upgrade, just go for the new i5 in January.
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# ? Dec 27, 2010 00:28 |
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Does anyone know of a list anywhere with confirmed UEFI motherboards for Sandy Bridge launch?
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# ? Dec 27, 2010 02:00 |
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PC LOAD LETTER posted:Yea this guy got a engineering sample. He posts at XS all the time and got his sample to a little over 5Ghz. Intel also demoed a overclocked system at 4.9Ghz with a stock heatsink running Cinebench before him though. Supposedly you don't need high volts to OC them either, but we'll have to wait and see because all we have right now are ES screens on random sites to go by. I'm sure retail SBs definitely won't hit the overclocks achieved by the hand-picked ES chips.
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# ? Dec 27, 2010 12:23 |
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PC LOAD LETTER posted:Yea this guy got a engineering sample. He posts at XS all the time and got his sample to a little over 5Ghz. Intel also demoed a overclocked system at 4.9Ghz with a stock heatsink running Cinebench before him though. Supposedly you don't need high volts to OC them either, but we'll have to wait and see because all we have right now are ES screens on random sites to go by. That's crazy they got that high an overclock out out of those chips but I have a feeling they were cherry-picked. As for upgrading, I would be coming from an overclocked C2D E8400 so I would be joining the quad-core club but at this point I'm going to wait until the final verdict on the 5th to see if these are worth upgrading to or not. I use my system primarily for games and internet so I don't need something absurdly powerful. But I'm seeing more games recommend and take advantage of quad-core and the Intel quads are better at the moment.
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# ? Dec 28, 2010 18:41 |
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freeforumuser posted:I'm sure retail SBs definitely won't hit the overclocks achieved by the hand-picked ES chips. It sounds like you're under the impression that engineering samples are of higher quality than the retail chips. They aren't. Tweaks to the design to improve yields will have been added, and the manufacturing process will have been improved, so a substantially larger portion of the retail chips will be capable of achieving those speeds than the engineering samples, even at release. I would expect Intel to favor higher-binning chips for the unlocked models anyway, since it wouldn't cost them anything and better overclocks will convince more people to pay the extra.
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# ? Dec 28, 2010 20:33 |
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Zhentar posted:It sounds like you're under the impression that engineering samples are of higher quality than the retail chips. They aren't. Tweaks to the design to improve yields will have been added, and the manufacturing process will have been improved, so a substantially larger portion of the retail chips will be capable of achieving those speeds than the engineering samples, even at release. Production chipsets and CPUs come with functionality disabled as well. Some of our Ibex Peak docs had pages just filled with BGA balls marked 'NC"; the Intel FAE said the functionality that was supposed to be present didn't pass QA, so they just wrote off that part of the silicon and those balls, too late to change it.
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 00:28 |
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Gigabyte is to be avoided like the plague. I found various previews of their new boards and they do indeed still have regular old BIOSes.
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 01:24 |
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Is crazy that all the Sandy Bridge CPU's are at a minimum of 3.1 GHZ and overclock to 3.4GHZ. Maybe this is a sign that the 4GHZ barrier might be broken?
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 01:58 |
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TBH I've never understood why the single core Turbo frequency is only ~10% higher. Whats the point? Make it 15-20 at least
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 02:23 |
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Combat Pretzel posted:Gigabyte is to be avoided like the plague. I found various previews of their new boards and they do indeed still have regular old BIOSes. Then which motherboard maker is going to have UEFI on their SB boards? And is UEFI needed yet other than allowing the boot drive to be larger than 2TB? I would like to get a board with UEFI but I don't want to pay a premium for it. If they cost significantly more than BIOS boards then I'm sticking with a BIOS board.
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 02:33 |
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Combat Pretzel posted:Gigabyte is to be avoided like the plague. I found various previews of their new boards and they do indeed still have regular old BIOSes. I'll still with the P67A-UD4 I have now, thanks. (Even if I don't have a CPU, yet.)
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 03:06 |
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freeforumuser posted:I'm sure retail SBs definitely won't hit the overclocks achieved by the hand-picked ES chips. spasticColon posted:That's crazy they got that high an overclock out out of those chips but I have a feeling they were cherry-picked.
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 03:38 |
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ilkhan posted:The only thing that interests me about EFI is possibly faster boot times. But I always use sleep, making boot times irrelevant. With both an SSD and faster boot times, I wonder about just going to hibernate.
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 04:15 |
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WhyteRyce posted:With both an SSD and faster boot times, I wonder about just going to hibernate.
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 05:04 |
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Alereon posted:On current versions of Windows these modes have been combined into Hybrid Standby. The system hibernates, then switches to Standby mode. The result is if power isn't cut to the system, it wakes up instantly as if it was asleep. If it does lose power, then when power is restored it wakes up from Hibernate mode without having to wait for a full reboot. Yeah but if I just do hibernate on my desktop I can save a whopping 1W of power or something minuscule like that! Or in the case of my work laptop I bring it out of sleep after the weekend only to find that I have 30% battery left during a morning meeting. WhyteRyce fucked around with this message at 06:14 on Dec 29, 2010 |
# ? Dec 29, 2010 06:12 |
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WhyteRyce posted:With both an SSD and faster boot times, I wonder about just going to hibernate.
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 07:11 |
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ilkhan posted:Hibernate is enough data that I wouldn't want to use it on an SSD. Why? The impression I got from the SSD thread is that you basically don't have to worry about modern SSDs' lifespans unless you actively try to gently caress them up.
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 07:16 |
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Toast Museum posted:Why? The impression I got from the SSD thread is that you basically don't have to worry about modern SSDs' lifespans unless you actively try to gently caress them up. Capacity's a concern, though, and your hibernation file is as big as your RAM. On a fairly ordinary system with 4 gigs of RAM and an 80-90 gig SSD, that's about 5% of the drive's total capacity just for the hibernation file.
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 07:23 |
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But it gets deleted afterward.
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 07:47 |
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ilkhan posted:Hibernate is enough data that I wouldn't want to use it on an SSD. Hybrid sleep is useful, however. Put system to sleep, let it write the hibernation data, unplug, carry to LAN. Plug in and hit power, boom everything is back where it was. I'm confused, you don't want to hibernate because it requires too much data but you want to use hybrid sleep even though it writes the same hibernation data?
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 07:58 |
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Nonpython posted:But it gets deleted afterward. What? No, it doesn't, at least not on Windows. As long as hibernation is enabled, hiberfil.sys exists on the root of the boot drive, equal in size to the amount of physical RAM in the system. Even if you could delete it, you'd still have a requirement to keep at least that much free space set aside, which boils down to the same thing: less space available for the rest of your data.
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 08:00 |
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spasticColon posted:Then which motherboard maker is going to have UEFI on their SB boards? Don't quote me, I may be totally wrong. As far as I know ASUS, MSI, and ASRock have UEFI. Gigabyte will get their UEFI update down the road. 1155 Motherboards ASRock: http://www.asrock.com/mb/index.asp?s=1155 ASUS: http://www.asus.com/ProductGroup2.aspx?PG_ID=mKyCKlQ4oSEtSu5m Gigabyte: http://www.gigabyte.com/products/list.aspx?s=42&jid=1&p=2&v=24 MSI: http://www.msi.com/index.php?func=prodpage2&maincat_no=1&cat2_no=170&cat3_no=893 Biostar: http://www.biostar.com.tw/app/en/mb/index.php?S_ID=13 fuseshock fucked around with this message at 23:13 on Dec 29, 2010 |
# ? Dec 29, 2010 08:03 |
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I live in Shenzhen, China, which is a major site for black/grey market electronics. I can see there are people selling Sandy Bridge processors already, and a reputable chinese online retailer is already selling three MSI boards. I'm kind of tempted to try my luck, but Shenzhen is also famous for fake electronics so I don't really wanna get burned.
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 10:27 |
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MeramJert posted:I live in Shenzhen, China, which is a major site for black/grey market electronics. I can see there are people selling Sandy Bridge processors already, and a reputable chinese online retailer is already selling three MSI boards. I'm kind of tempted to try my luck, but Shenzhen is also famous for fake electronics so I don't really wanna get burned. I wouldn't try my luck with expensive electronics in those markets. Fake watches and other accessories, maybe, but not a motherboard. Unless of course you really trust and know of a reputable one.
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 11:06 |
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spasticColon posted:Then which motherboard maker is going to have UEFI on their SB boards? And is UEFI needed yet other than allowing the boot drive to be larger than 2TB? I would like to get a board with UEFI but I don't want to pay a premium for it. If they cost significantly more than BIOS boards then I'm sticking with a BIOS board. I'm going with the P8P67 Pro from Asus currently. I like Gigabyte, I currently have a loving expensive one from them, but their support and promises are usually bullshit. So if the current series of boards don't have EFI, they'll never get it. For me it's the principle. Everyone's FINALLY going to use EFI, and they're trailing behind. Combat Pretzel fucked around with this message at 12:19 on Dec 29, 2010 |
# ? Dec 29, 2010 12:15 |
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fuseshock posted:I wouldn't try my luck with expensive electronics in those markets. Fake watches and other accessories, maybe, but not a motherboard. Unless of course you really trust and know of a reputable one. No, the motherboards are being sold by 京东 which is a reputable online retailer. I assume the processors are engineering samples smuggled out of the dozens of motherboard manufacturer's factories in Shenzhen
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 12:34 |
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Space Gopher posted:What? No, it doesn't, at least not on Windows. As long as hibernation is enabled, hiberfil.sys exists on the root of the boot drive, equal in size to the amount of physical RAM in the system. Even if you could delete it, you'd still have a requirement to keep at least that much free space set aside, which boils down to the same thing: less space available for the rest of your data. Not only does the hibernation file doesn't get deleted as you mention (I just disable hibernation), but everyone is also forgetting about the page file. I have 6 gigs of RAM installed now, and according to windows 6143 MB are allocated right now, with 9214 being recommended. If I left hibernation enabled and kept the page file on the SSD, that would add up to 12GB right there. And if I were building a new PC, I'd probably just go with 8 gigs, so that would be about 16GB or 20% of the smaller SSDs. That said, as excited as I am about the new processor, my currently setup of (stock) Q6600 with a 8800GT just doesn't seem slow to me yet. The graphics card could be upgraded for some games and oveclocking the CPU would help, but otherwise it almost feels like Sandy Bridge is coming out too soon.
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 13:57 |
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mobby_6kl posted:That said, as excited as I am about the new processor, my currently setup of (stock) Q6600 with a 8800GT just doesn't seem slow to me yet. The graphics card could be upgraded for some games and oveclocking the CPU would help, but otherwise it almost feels like Sandy Bridge is coming out too soon. I'm in pretty much exactly the same boat. I plan on throwing $200 at a new graphics card eventually so I can throw hdmi across the room to my a/v system, but it's not really something I need right now. C2Q and 8800GT going strong so far, though when crysis 2 comes out...
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 14:44 |
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WhyteRyce posted:I'm confused, you don't want to hibernate because it requires too much data but you want to use hybrid sleep even though it writes the same hibernation data?
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 17:24 |
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ilkhan posted:No, I said hydrid sleep is useful, but I wouldn't use it with an SSD. My systems have 6-8GB RAM, and I wouldn't want that much data going on/off/repeat an SSD 4x (or more) a day. useful != will always use.
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 17:36 |
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ilkhan posted:No, I said hydrid sleep is useful, but I wouldn't use it with an SSD. My systems have 6-8GB RAM, and I wouldn't want that much data going on/off/repeat an SSD 4x (or more) a day. useful != will always use. Ah but then your description of why you found hybrid sleep to be useful was basically just describing what hibernate does, so I got confused. Unless you were referring to a laptop in which cause just normal sleep would do that as well.
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 18:00 |
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http://semiaccurate.com/2010/12/28/msi-shows-its-big-bang-marshal-board/quote:WHAT DO YOU do as a motherboard manufacturer when you have to come up with a flagship product that is unlike anything your competitors have? Well, in the case of MSI you create the Big Bang Marshal, a monster of a board that features no less than eight x16 PCI Express slots in an XL-ATX form factor. why, why, why, would someone need this? I'd like to know more about how they implemented this bridge chip because otherwise what the gently caress WhyteRyce fucked around with this message at 18:07 on Dec 29, 2010 |
# ? Dec 29, 2010 18:05 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 09:42 |
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I'd like to see how well 8 graphics cards (or even 4) work when sharing only 16 PCI-E lanes between them. Bridge chips like the NF200 and Lucid Hydra help, but that only goes so far.
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# ? Dec 29, 2010 18:11 |