Intel 3.40EE & 3.60E - LGA Arrives 121
MBR writes "MBReview has taken a quick look at Intel's
new high-end LGA775 processors, the 3.40GHz Extreme Edition, and the 3.60GHz
'E,' now known as the 560. They've covered some of the questions about pin
frailty of the new LGA socket, as well as cooling issues that might arise
from these new processors." ("LGA" stands for Land Grid Array, which moves pins from the processor to the socket it sits in.) Update: 06/19 20:50 GMT by T :
Reader Chi-Energy points out that besides the new processor packaging, Intel has also just released its i925X and i915 chipsets, PCI Express and DDR2 DRAM for the desktop, and links to this review showcase with benchmarks at HotHardware.
New pins (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:New pins (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:New pins (Score:5, Insightful)
A CPU can be replaced in just a couple of minutes. A motherboard would take much longer, depending on your case type, how many cards you have, and all the various types of things you're going to have to unplug from it and plug back in.
Re:New pins (Score:5, Insightful)
If 6 minutes of your time is worth $300 - $750 then you obviously make way more than I do.
AMD is going to start using the same technology. When Intel does it, it is a pain in the ass, when AMD does it, it's innovation.
Besides, you have to be pretty careless with your hardware to break a pin.
Re:New pins (Score:5, Insightful)
Who's paying for the RMA? if the natural life span of the pins is about 8 insertions (as the mobo producers seem to claim), then there would be a large number of legitimate breakages that get sent back to the mobo manufacturer. Now, they can either replace the CPU socket (not very funny, I think) or throw away the whole mobo, including the rest of the perfectly good components on it[*]. As oppose do just discarding a defective CPU if its pins break.
[*]like the spankin' new and expensive Intel chipsets. I doubt $150 will happen anytime soon as a mobo price, as even the chipset estimated price seems to be above that. I also doubt mobo manufacturers getting too many returns due to bent socket pins will be very happy about all this - remember, their margins are quite slim these days. The least hurt by this is probably going to be Intel itself.
Your AMD jab is a troll. As far as they stated so far, the Opteron socket stays put for the foreseeable future (meaning at least one year). They will have no incentive to move to a pinless package unless it shows some solid advantage. Even Intel might have to back down on this if the hw producers get to unhappy (and they already have enough grief with the BTX form factor).
Finally - pins break. It's called mechanical stress. How many times do you think you can 'carefully' insert and remove a CPU in its socket before some pin gives in? At least, for the old sockets, all you had to do is match pins and holes ; now, with only point contacts, bending can come so much easier.
Re:New pins (Score:2)
I don't know about you, but for my part I have never removed and inserted a CPU into its socket more than a couple of time. And remember that 99% of their revenue doesn't come from people that do that more than once.
So again, don't generalize on the "Geek point of view". They don't give a sh*t if your CPU/mobo breaks
Re:New pins (Score:1, Funny)
So I guess it's time for chipsets in sockets, too.
Re:New pins (Score:3, Insightful)
The only problem you might experience with this is if you break off pins in the socket or the processor, but it seems like a (mostly) unlikely situation.
Re:New pins (Score:1)
Re:New pins (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:New pins (Score:3, Insightful)
I am a little disapointed that Intel did not go with a pin insert. However it would have cost more which would have been hard to justify to the mainboard makers and their razor thin margins. In the long run I think that a pin insert would have been a smart move. Judgeing by the reported fragility of the socket 775 I won't be surprised if Intel moves to a ne
Re:New pins (Score:2)
Well, it would take some fairly repeatable benchmarks, at least. Maybe you could sell "higher quality" ones with gold plated pins and a heatspreader or something. Of course, you could always package them with the CPU...
I resent that; I haven't spent more than a couple of quid on IDE and VGA cables
Re:New pins (Score:2)
Re:New pins (Score:2)
This line of thinking's got me wondering about cooling both sides of a processor... maybe if you made one with the pins at one corner, like a little slot, pack heatsinks to both sides of it; with the right mounting gear and processor package you could effectively double your cooling area. Maybe one way of dealing with the heat of dual/quad core chips and lower sur
Re:New pins (Score:2)
Re:New pins (Score:2)
(or maybe that wouldn't work, i'm not a processor engineer.)
Re:New pins (Score:2)
The UltraSPARC II used something like what you refer to.
Re:New pins (Score:2)
Pins (Score:3, Interesting)
At high frequencies, the pins on a package aren't really short circuits (ie, zero resistance); they have a capactiance and inductance which mess with the signals. Making removable pins would make this a lot worse.
Re:New pins (Score:2)
Intel is begging for trouble in many ways (Score:1, Interesting)
They recently has a press release where they stated that they intend to produce processors that consumer 200watts by the end of the year. And that's not peak power as many people naively want to pretend, that's mostly leakage
Re:New pins (Score:2)
The advantage of the new setup is that the CPU is locked in place better, so as long a
Re:New pins (Score:2, Interesting)
Seen it happen twice, once with a p4 and once with a p/166.
Both times, the chip was just fine afterwards.
What should we be concerned about? (Score:5, Interesting)
That said, are the Extreme Edition processors still selling for $900 USD a pop? Hardly seems worth the extra money for gaming, although a server that wants to survive Slashdottings could probably use one...
Re:What should we be concerned about? (Score:2)
Re:What should we be concerned about? (Score:2)
Re:What should we be concerned about? (Score:2)
The price ofcourse will go down, $900 is about right for a new processor. Give it a few months.
I just wish they had better benchmarks, They just compare the new processors to other intel processors.
Is not (Score:2, Insightful)
These chip make futiliity. Why make processors of like these new when you can improve on 64 bit? The battle is to will be lost to Athlon without 64 bit competition by.
Re:Is not (Score:4, Insightful)
Are you running 64-bit apps I'm not aware of?
Re:Is not (Score:2)
Re:Is not (Score:1)
Re:Is not (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Is not (Score:2)
Re:Is not (Score:1)
I'm fairly sure that whatever CPU you have it'd have to work pretty hard to beat a 1 GHz Nehemiah CPU at doing AES encryption. The reason is that somebody had a great idea to integrate it into the CPU, so it can encrypt one block per clock cycle.
Pure brute force of course helps, but what's better? A 1 GHz CPU that can encrypt a block in a clock cycle, using somewhere about 20W for the motherboard and CPU, or a 4 GHz CPU that needs 200 clock cycles to do it in software, an
Re:Is not (Score:3, Insightful)
A higher clockrate is ALWAYS better from a performance standpoint. ALWAYS. ALWAYS. ALWAYS. If you know anything about synchronous logic design you would know there is no debate about this.
True, provided that you are comparing processors with identical design that only differ in clockrate. But of course this is by far not the case, the P4 and Athlon 64 are implemented in fundamentally different ways. For example, in order to achieve the high clockrates with which they want to market their products to the
Re:Is not (Score:1)
It's actually cheaper and faster to run a dual Intel Xeon computer than it is to run a P4EE.
But they aren't running and can't run at the same clockspeeds. I suspect that without Marginally Extreme Cooling, AMD's chips would si
Just look at the benchmarks (Score:1)
BTX (which includes LGA) standard resisted (Score:4, Interesting)
But what's new here? Word has it that this time round, the Taiwanese heastink, mainboard and PSU manufacturers - and quite a lot of them it would seem - are being rather less than enthusiastic or co-operative, about the sweeping changes and support that Intel is asking, nay demanding, of them.
I'd be interested to see if Intel can actually strong-arm them into it
Re:BTX (which includes LGA) standard resisted (Score:2)
With mainland facilities becoming more and more advanced, but without huge increases in cost, I think Intel can get their way. All they need to do is say, "Shanghai" and I bet the Taiwanese manufacturers will change their minds.
Re:BTX (which includes LGA) standard resisted (Score:2)
I'm not sure the Chinese-ownd Chinese plants have much incentive either, I think it is futile on the part of Intel.
Re:BTX (which includes LGA) standard resisted (Score:2)
Re:BTX (which includes LGA) standard resisted (Score:2)
Re:BTX (which includes LGA) standard resisted (Score:2)
Re:BTX (which includes LGA) standard resisted (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:BTX (which includes LGA) standard resisted (Score:2)
Re:BTX (which includes LGA) standard resisted (Score:2)
Intel has decided that the motherboard/case manufactuers need to shoulder the cost of the cooling required by the newest Intel chips.
This of course is not going over well. Computers are such a mainstream industry that the profit margins are very low and Intel is basicly trying to shift some of the cost away and increase their profits at the expense of another part of the industry.
I only hope they get taught a lesson like IBM did with Microchannel. But I'm not hop
Re:BTX (which includes LGA) standard resisted (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:BTX (which includes LGA) standard resisted (Score:2)
The fan duct? Ha. There are a few aftermarket mods for putting fan ducts into an ATX case. Compaq and Dell use fan ducting too, in some models.
Small form factors? There already exist micro ATX and even NLX form factors. OK, the PCI-E video cards do get better cooling under BTX, but there's nothing there that says that an ATX
Wow, look at the length of the 3.40 EE bar! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Wow, look at the length of the 3.40 EE bar! (Score:5, Interesting)
nothing like a graph [mbreview.com] that makes a 10% difference look like a 90% gap.
Pictures of the socket (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyone have any links to any? Does this new chip just rest on the pins or is there some more positive mounting method (besides that cover that goes over the CPU)?
Re:Pictures of the socket (Score:2)
Re:Pictures of the socket (Score:5, Informative)
For a more comprehensive overview of the whole BTX, DDR2, Socket 775 and PCI Express malarkey, I'd recommend having a look here [tomshardware.com]. Interesting stuff.
About time for them to use LGA... (Score:4, Informative)
Watercooling (Score:1)
Maybe we are going to see better watercooling systems due to mainstream demand. That would be pretty cool. (NPI)
Re:Watercooling (Score:1)
I think it has already started. Did you know that Sony and Apple have both implemented watercooling in their newest systems? 'Looks like that transition to 90nm is a bitch. Here's the links:
Sony VAIO R Series "Features" Page (including "Advanced Liquid Cooling System") [sonystyle.com]
Apple Power Mac G5 "Design" Page (including "liquid cooling system") [apple.com]
another crap review (Score:5, Insightful)
look here (Score:1)
http://www.aceshardware.com/read.jsp?id=60000301
2003
http://www.aceshardware.com/read.jsp?id=50000356
Not exactly what you are looking for but it will give you a clue how much performance an upgrade will give. Digging further back in the archive to say 2001 might be even better.
Re:another crap review (Score:2)
Quantitative comparisons between components with such disparate performances are pretty much meaningless - "I'll wait until a new graphics card has exactly 2.5 times the performance of my old to get it." With such new features as Pixel Shader 3.0 coming (even though games may not support it yet), the quality of the picture i
Re:another crap review (Score:3, Insightful)
Still could be a paper release? (Score:1)
This is something Intel seems to be a master at. Releasing CPU's to review sites that you can't buy for a long time just to get the hype and "title" of the fastest. Other companies do it, just not as bad as Intel.
My personal opinion is
Best for use only in winter (Score:5, Interesting)
In my opinion, it is rediculous for a single processor to single-handedly run up your power bill. That's like having two light bulbs on 24/7 (assuming you keep your computer on), not to mention the power needed to cool your PC, let alone your house's air conditioner.
I would take a VIA chip for low-performance stuff, and an Athlon64 for performance computing. support 64-bit software including 64-bit Linux distributions, are faster than Intel's best even running 32-bit software, and they have a maximum power usage of 89W. Because of Cool'n'Quiet mode, they spend most of the time running at 800MHz consuming about 30-35W and generally not requiring a loud and abnoxious cooling fan.
It is actually impressive what the chips can do at 800MHz. You can play a full screen DVD at 1400x1050, and the CPU usage tops out at about 5% (at 800MHz). If, of course, you run something that requires more power, like a video game or a compiler, the processor instantly switches to full speed. Handy, that.
Re:Best for use only in winter (Score:4, Informative)
One way to prove this to yourself is to simply remove the heatsink from a running Pentium IV Prescott system. Shock, horror: it will continue to run, only slowly. That's the same slowly the system silently goes into and out of depending on the CPU load (it takes about 10000 CPU cycles, or about 3 millionths of a second, to get into or out of this state.) Now: try web browsing or reading email while it's running like this. Tell the difference? Didn't think so. You might notice a _slight_ slowdown (when rendering a complex page, for example): that's because without the heatsink on, the CPU won't go back into the "normal" S0 power state.
So, just as a Pentium 4 doesn't dissipate 103W without a heatsink installed, so to does it not dissipate 103W if you're not doing anything.
This can all be found in http://developer.intel.com
Handy, that.
Re:Best for use only in winter (Score:2)
Re:Best for use only in winter (Score:2)
We really need _that_! (Score:2, Funny)
TIME TO LEARN FROM HISTORY (Score:2, Interesting)
It seems to me that when Intel develops a product half way through the design process they realize they screwed up but still release the original tech to make cash, then the fixed version of that tech comes out 6-12
This is interesting, but . . . (Score:1)
Re:This is interesting, but . . . (Score:1)
Still, nitpicking aside, I get what you're saying. P6
Re:This is interesting, but . . . (Score:1)
Intel 925 chipset feature (Score:5, Interesting)
the intel 925 chipset has native support for a mixed raid, where you can create a raid 0 partiiton across two hard drives, using only part of the hdd capacity on each drive for the raid 0 partition. the rest of the unpartitioned space can be set aside as a raid 1 partition. that way you can install the OS and other non-critical files tha can be lost to the raid 0 partition and get the performance, but if one of the drives fail, you can store your important stuff on the raid 1 partition. I'm trying to find a controller card that will do this functionality, but I can't find anyone that claims to explicitly support it. the only reason I know about the 925 features is I got a chance to play with a pre-production board. definitely a cool feature.
Re:Intel 925 chipset feature (Score:2)
You might've thought of that already, or not be able to use Linux, but nevertheless, thought I'd mention.
Cheers