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2SHY
QUOTE (TechPowerUp)
Intel LGA2011 Socket, X68 Express Chipset Pictured
Here are the first pictures of Intel's new high-end CPU socket, the 2011-pin land grid array (LGA2011). A selection of pictures of an unannounced motherboard by MSI made it to the internet. LGA2011, coupled with a new chipset, the Intel X68 Express, will drive the company's new high-end and enthusiast-grade processors that feature 6, 8, or 12 cores, and quad-channel DDR3 memory controllers. At first sight, the LGA2011 is huge! Its retention clip looks to be completely detachable by unhooking the retention bars on either sides. With all LGA sockets till date, you needed to unhook one retention bar, letting you open the retention clip along a hinge.

Since the processor has four DDR3 memory channels, there's room for only one DIMM per channel on a typically-sized ATX motherboard. On this particular motherboard, we can make out that there are two DIMM slots on either sides of the socket, accommodating two channels each. With this platform, Intel transferred the northbridge component completely to the CPU package, much like LGA1156/LGA1155. Therefore, the 32-lane PCI-Express controller is housed inside the CPU package. What remains of the chipset is a PCH (platform controller hub). Like P55/H55/P67/H67, the X68 is a PCH, a glorified southbridge. It will house a smaller PCI-E hub that handles various connectivity devices, a storage controller, a LPCIO controller, USB and HDA controllers, and the DMI link to the processor. We will get to know more about this platform as the year progresses.


Dual Channel + Dual Channel = Quad Channel Memory DDR3

Possibly MSI Branded Motherboard?

More to come. But its just more of the same from Intel imo.
jdog
very interesting indeed...but is it legit?

that is the question....
.:Cyb3rGlitch:.
I'm yet to find anything meaningful which taxes my i7 920, so this doesn't really excite me. Maybe we'll see better benchmarks for people who're into that.
mudg3
Cool. Bring it on I say. Aslong as I can OC and Vm im happy!
nesquick
I saw this today, can't wait for this and bulldozer.
nobodyishere
QUOTE
Like P55/H55/P67/H67, the X68 is a PCH, a glorified southbridge. It will house a smaller PCI-E hub that handles various connectivity devices, a storage controller, a LPCIO controller, USB and HDA controllers, and the DMI link to the processor. We will get to know more about this platform as the year progresses.


seriously? DMI link from cpu to southbridge? wont that bottle-neck anything hanging off the southbridge? aka SSD's...... (assume a typical highend pc here,
running mulitpile HDD's/SSD's/Videocards/maybe a dedicated raid controller/pci-e network card)
it doesn't look like they want to future-proof this next socket / this high-end generation....

i wonder why they went with DMI over QPI for the cpu to southbridge, seems odd to use a lower bandwidth link when the SSD
market is almost shipping SSD's that saturate the new 6gbps sata links on masse~ ...
nobody813
Looks pretty cool, though I wished the pictures weren't blury

I read this on Techpowerup just after tea, but didn't think it was legit (I thought it would've had 8 memory slots or something :P)

I'm looking forward to the Bulldozer boards (they also had one on Techpowerup)
nesquick
QUOTE (nobodyishere @ Jan 10 2011, 11:38 PM) *
QUOTE
Like P55/H55/P67/H67, the X68 is a PCH, a glorified southbridge. It will house a smaller PCI-E hub that handles various connectivity devices, a storage controller, a LPCIO controller, USB and HDA controllers, and the DMI link to the processor. We will get to know more about this platform as the year progresses.


seriously? DMI link from cpu to southbridge? wont that bottle-neck anything hanging off the southbridge? aka SSD's...... (assume a typical highend pc here,
running mulitpile HDD's/SSD's/Videocards/maybe a dedicated raid controller/pci-e network card)
it doesn't look like they want to future-proof this next socket / this high-end generation....

i wonder why they went with DMI over QPI for the cpu to southbridge, seems odd to use a lower bandwidth link when the SSD
market is almost shipping SSD's that saturate the new 6gbps sata links on masse~ ...

its 2.5gt/s should be fast enough.
philo-sofa
QUOTE (.:Cyb3rGlitch:. @ Jan 10 2011, 09:55 PM) *
I'm yet to find anything meaningful which taxes my i7 920, so this doesn't really excite me. Maybe we'll see better benchmarks for people who're into that.


For the first time I feel the exact same way - am I getting old or have things kinda not caught up completely with the whole Conroe thing and Intels high-speed advancement from Conroe yet, making 'moar powaar' kinda pointless? Answers in humorous troll form acceptable.
nesquick
QUOTE (philo-sofa @ Jan 11 2011, 01:40 PM) *
QUOTE (.:Cyb3rGlitch:. @ Jan 10 2011, 09:55 PM) *
I'm yet to find anything meaningful which taxes my i7 920, so this doesn't really excite me. Maybe we'll see better benchmarks for people who're into that.


For the first time I feel the exact same way - am I getting old or have things kinda not caught up completely with the whole Conroe thing and Intels high-speed advancement from Conroe yet, making 'moar powaar' kinda pointless? Answers in humorous troll form acceptable.

iv been running a phenom 555 for the last few months and see no need to upgrade for the stuff I do so I think you may be onto something there, probably the current gen consoles holding us back re: processing requirements of games.
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