Intel Demos Core 2 Extreme QX9650 Quad-Core At IDF 102
MojoKid writes "Intel demonstrated a dual socket gaming rig at IDF this week, based on their Skulltrail platform with the X38 chipset. The interesting thing about this machine wasn't just that it had 45nm quad-core CPUs in its sockets, as well as PCI Express 2.0 capable slots, but also that it was running a pair of NVIDIA graphics cards in SLI. That's right, SLI on an Intel chipset. No word whether or not X38 would officially be supported with SLI just yet. In fact, NVIDIA representatives noted Intel was buying NVIDIA nForce 100 SLI Southbridges just for this one Intel motherboard model."
but how to pay for it? (Score:1)
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SSE4 is overrated (Score:5, Interesting)
The chip as a whole, on the other hand, is quite awesome, but I think its important to correct this bit of common misinformation.
Re:SSE4 is overrated (Score:4, Interesting)
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But this ain't even Sparta [softpedia.com]!!1!2!eleven
np: Kid606 - Pregnant Cheerleader Theme Song (Who Still Kill Sound?)
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Re:SSE4 is overrated (Score:5, Interesting)
I think there's a lot of as-yet unrealized potential here, and it will be interesting to see where it leads. It won't be the end-all be-all of encoding, but it will be another arrow in the quiver.
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Super duper deca-core X8789FDS extreme (Score:4, Insightful)
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How else would you name these things so as to communicate A.) what type of chip is it (entry level, mainstream, or high end) and B.) the model number of the chip and C.) the basic technical information that people want (i.e. "quad core")?
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A model that ends in xx00 supports a 1066mhz FSB while a model that ends in xx50 supports a 1333mhz FSB.
This isn't always true, older chips all ended in xx00 and some used an 800mhz FSB and some used a 1066mhz FSB. Also, I believe there are a couple of chips that end in xx20 and xx40 to confuse things a little further. I'm pretty sure all newer chips that support a 1333mhz FSB end in "50" though instead of "00".
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some people really don't need nor care about he latest and greatest.. what we have is fast enough for what we need...
i want optimization - not a space heater
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Re:Super duper deca-core X8789FDS extreme (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Super duper deca-core X8789FDS extreme (Score:4, Interesting)
I was a youth BEFORE the invention of the microprocessor. I did my growing up years on a CDC Cyber 72 mainframe, but we were all pretty excited when the 4004 came out. The 4004 was actually the first microprocessor I ever owned: in a Mattel Electronics Football game. Before that, I had an ENIAC -- which was just six really smart switches I could wire to do all sorts of cool tasks. And when I was really little, I had a Dr. Nym, which was a marble-and-gravity cascading flip-flop game.
Now get off my lawn, you damn kids!
LUXURY! (Score:3, Funny)
But you try and tell the young people today that... and they won't believe ya.
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Oops, sorry, it was a GENIAC [wikipedia.org], not an ENIAC [wikipedia.org].
They say when you get old, the mind is the second thing to go.
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It all sprang from the end of the GHz wars
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I really like ye olde days where the speed is in the model number. Or the intel equiv. speed as the case may be.
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(duh)
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AFAIK, there are 3 letters that Intel uses to label their desktop chips. E means dual core, Q means quad core and X means extreme. The difference with th
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X = Xtreme Edition (unlocked multiplier)
9650, I don't know.. But I wonder if thats a typo, as the latest quad core is a 6850, so maybe this is the 6950? I could be wrong.
I can see your point though. I mean they had the 2000 series, the 4000 series, and the 6000 series. What happened to 1000, 3000 and 5000?
Fans (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Fans (Score:4, Funny)
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I have just one word for you: Thundercougarfalconbird
Re:Fans -- Compressors! (Score:3, Interesting)
http://www.custompc.co.uk/news/601310/idf-556ghz-penryn-breaks-three-benchmark-records-in-two-minutes.html [custompc.co.uk]
That is 5.56 Ghz demonstrated at the IDF. It ran and broke 3 CPU speed records in under 2 minutes. This is extreme! Don't ask how much power the cascaded refrigeration system uses.
"Worth then proceeded to show off the fruit of his labours by claiming he could brea
Yeah, but does it have a coffee-can exhaust? (Score:1, Funny)
It can't be a rice rocket without those accessories!
Re:Fans (Score:4, Funny)
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Although rice rockets are the modern equivalent, this kind of looks-over-performance started back in the '50s during the custom car craze. The Beach Boys wrote a song about it called "No-Go Showboat":
"Well the engine compartment's filled with all chrome goodies
In my no-go showboat (no-go showboat)
Yeah but everybody takes me even old Ford woodies
In my no-go showboat (no-go showboat)
When it comes to speed, man, I'm just outa luck
I'm even shut down by the ice cream truck
'Cause it's a no-go showboat (
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Seriously though, I'm with you on the low RPM/large diameter thing. I put one of those in my desktop when I couldn't stand the noise from the stock cooler anymore, and it can keep the CPU below 50C at max load, almost silently. Blows air out and over the GPU and chipset heatsinks too. Pretty good for a cheap cooler, except that it's actually slightly over the weight specification for a 775 coo
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FBDIMMs are a joke for a gameing system + weak SLI (Score:4, Informative)
A AMD 4x4 dual quad-core with DDR2 ram and dual x16 pci 2.0 and all slots with pci 2.0 and SLI, also there will also be a ATI chipset for the same system with all pci 2.0 16x-16x or 8x-8x-8x-8x CrossFire + Discrete PCI-E x4 slot. With Support for HTX slots.
Re:FBDIMMs are a joke for a gameing system + weak (Score:3, Insightful)
The funny thing is, as far as I can tell, you really aren't even saying anything. You can spew specs and acronyms all you want, but what is the actual tested performance compared to this Skulltrail rig?
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Slashdot Man Law 0x40: If their UID is under 10000, you must also buy them a beer (or in the case of PFY, a Jolt.)
Money where yer mouth is (Score:2)
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Re:FBDIMMs are a joke for a gameing system + weak (Score:2)
'there old v8'? Where? I don't see any 'old v8'.
all this and the kitchen sink too... (Score:4, Interesting)
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Do vendors ever sell the super high end gaming systems?
No, they generally don't. My guess is that Dell, HP and the others will never sell a system like this, but the super gaming dorks who think they need this crap will order all the parts and build their systems themselves. Just like they've always done.
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Remember, the motherboard is custom-built.
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This platform, as stated, will not be available with a feature set like this for about five to ten years, unless you're going to actually pay a price in the neighborhood of $5000. Comparatively, I have a AMD rig I build myself that right now can get about 3/4 the power of that rig which I built for $750. I still can't find anything (save Ageia PhysX software) that'll put a strain on the system (well... SuSE 10.2 and
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It's funny what you say about the 20% faster, though. In high end tech terms, that 20% is full scale mind blowing dominance. 100fps versus 120fps, heh.. what, that's not worth an extra couple grand to you?
I bet this pc's refrigerator cost more than my whole computer.
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I wonder if there is a sub-class of audiophile gamers? I could sell them granite cases lined with gold leaf to go along with their balanced power cords and CD
demagnetizers.
Actually there are probably a few workstation users that could actually use one of these. They would just have to put them into cases with out flames or skulls.
Time Again (Score:2)
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IMO the best metric for when to replace a computer: if it won't do what you want any longer. That covers both being dead (lightning damage) and being too slow to run the latest game that you really want.
Unless you upgrade regularly, you probably shouldn't bother with considering upgradability of your parts, possibly save the case, power supply, and disk drives. Every few years new processor
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That's not surprising (Score:5, Insightful)
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I have just had cause to upgrade my motherboard (MSI K8N-something), and have noticed that nvidia have dropped the ball somewhat, in that there was no upgrade path for me - only a complete replacement of m/b (it was broken), cpu (nothing takes 768pin any more), memory (new cpu, new memory) *and* graphics card (no AGP). Furthermore, nothing budget seems to have 2 ID
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It just ended up that I need pretty much everything replaced. The only things that don't need replacing are the disk drives (6 IDE and 4 SATA) and the PCI IDE boar
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IIRC crossfire hardware requirements are a superset of those of SLI, namely they require bus support for peer writes.
when i was a kid... (Score:5, Interesting)
seriously add in liquid cooling and cold cathodes and a 52" HDTV and youre talking over 3 killowatts of power draw... Im glad i play blizzard games, not only to people play them for a decade after theyre made, the initial launches try to have a configuration setting that will lower the bar and let less impressive systems play too.
sure their engines might not be so impressive that youd need quad 100 pixel pipeline cards... that themselves have 2 GB of ram on them.. or a system with 4x processors with 8 gb or ram... but i think the gaming industry has gone too far ever since they realized there was a market for $600 gaming cards..
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So what of the graphics cards? H
Re:when i was a kid... (Score:4, Interesting)
by the time 100 pixel pipeline cards become affordable ill probabbly be an old man... at least the way the vendors are dragging their toes at lowering the cost of performance cards. before the latest generation of ati card the lowest number of pixel pipes they had in a card was 8, this generation they sell defect 4 pipe cards as 2 pipeline cards, and nvidia isnt any better at lowering the cost of decent graphic cards.
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you still pay over $120 for a 12 pixel pipeline card, and those are using reject 16 pix pipe chips. ... not that long back i remember their being $40 graphic cards in best buy, but last time i was in their they sold nothing under $80. by the time 100 pixel pipeline cards become affordable ill probabbly be an old man
Huh? I just bought a card with 32 SPs for $100. ATI now sells midrange ($120) cards with 120 SPs. Both sell cards for under $40 (check online sometime) that kick three year old cards' ass. Check your facts.
The midrange market is not doing great in that you actually have to pay proportionally more to get a higher performing card (using the 8800 as the benchmark), but it's nowhere near as bad as you paint it.
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i mean wow... pulling 49 amps over the 12 v rail... you might as well sell them with a dc generator and solid copper power rails.
seriously add in liquid cooling and cold cathodes and a 52" HDTV and youre talking over 3 killowatts of power draw...
Well, yeah, maybe, sort of. Since the AC power comes out of the wall at 120V (and someone jump in and correct me if I'm wrong), the 12v 49a is the downconversion of 4.9a and 120v. 4.9a pulling at the outlet is a lot for a computer, it's true, but I mean, most hous
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NVIDIA is demonstrating tech for IDF? (Score:1, Funny)
For Allah's sake, hide the children and get to the bomb shelters! The IDF is coming!!! RUUUUNNNN!!!!!
Poster and commenter misconceptions... (Score:5, Informative)
Skultrail is a dual socket chipset (probably a Greencreek follow-on) -which means it CAN'T be a X38 which is a single socket chipset.
What was seen at IDF was TWO systems - one dual socket and one single.
Also... for those who think these won't come to market... The X38 is a planned commercial chipset and what everyone has been calling a V8 is basically a dual quad core DP workstation platform which has been available since last November. The Penryn gen version is just a newer version of the same thing.
Eight Intel cores in one box is old news, what's new is the perf on the Penryn 45nm parts.
Useful, or like chrome on the car? (Score:4, Insightful)
Is the current state of game software such that it really can take advantage of things like 8 cores? Or is this marketing hype and chest-thumping, but little else?
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I think a lot of what is driving this dual-quad-octo-deca-core EXTREME!!!!111!11!one!11!1 madness is that PC gamers who don't know much about hardware hear about how many cores are in a PS3 or Xbox360 and think their PC must have more cores than that in order to be better than a console. They don't r
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There is a pretty large high-end market where people will pay upwards of $4-5k for a gaming rig. The look on their face when they realize that 99% of the games on the market only take advantage of a single core? Priceless.
Instead of multiple cores making my game that much faster (and really, I think the video card is the biggest bottleneck) I am more interested in background tasks causing less drag on the game I'm playing. That is where multiple cores will come in handy. Though to be fair, I don't see much (if any) slowdown in my single-core overclocked amd3700 while gaming and downloading multiple torrents and having various apps like firefox sitting in the background.
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Does it have a Hemi? (Score:2)
AMD Needs Help It Seems (Score:1)
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