Intel Launches Z77 Motherboards, Preparing For Ivy Bridge 58
MojoKid writes "In preparation for the arrival of their 3rd Generation Core processor products based on their Ivy Bridge microarchitecture, Intel has readied a new chipset dubbed the Z77 Express. New socket 1155 Ivy Bridge processors offer 16 lanes of PCI Express 2.0 or 3.0 connectivity on-die and they feature integrated dual-channel, DDR3 memory controllers with maximum officially supported speeds of up to 1600MHz. The processors are linked to the Z77 chipset via Intel's FDI (Flexible Display Interface) and 20Gb/s DMI 2.0 interfaces. The chipset itself is outfitted with 8 more PCIe 2.0 lanes, six ports of SATA (II and III), an integrated Gigabit MAC, and digital display outputs for up to three displays. Making its debut for the first time in an Intel chipset is also native USB 3.0 support with four USB 3.0 and ten USB 2.0 ports built in."
Nice Spec - But.... (Score:1)
I can only hope that Intel in their esteemed wisdom allow more than 16Gb of Ram
AND
the MB manufacturers see fit to put a decent amount of Memory slots on the boards.
They probably won't though as this could be seen to be possibly eating intot their much more lucrative Server MBO business.
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That might be true for the 2011 Boards. A good number of them do seem to have 8 RAM Slots
I think what the OP was talking about was the MB makers releasing MB's with only 2 RAM Slots.
Then Intel has in the past released a cheapo chipset that was deliberately restricted in the amound of RAM that it supported.
Remember the MicroSoft Netbook Spec? Many makers implemented the RAM restrictions by using a low end chipset.
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Z80 (Score:4, Funny)
they allow upto 64GB on desktop models
Are you sure? The Z80 chipset only used to allow 64kB and the Z77 is presumably three models earlier.
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Re:Nice Spec - But.... (Score:5, Informative)
Uhh, LGA1155 boards have been able to do 32GB of RAM since a year and a half ago, as had LGA1156 boards before that.
Re:Nice Spec - But.... (Score:5, Informative)
I would certainly hope your servers have more than 16 gigabits of RAM.
As with most Intel chipset releases, there really isn't much to get excited about here. "Native" USB3 might be exciting to someone somewhere, but from a practical standpoint we've been getting USB3 on motherboards for the last couple years anyway, and extra PCIe lanes are for the most part only interesting to nutball gamers.
Z-series chipsets are enthusiast products. Basically all this stuff just integrates features that are already on $150+ motherboards into Intel's chips.
I give this a hearty "meh."
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Z-series chipsets are enthusiast products. Basically all this stuff just integrates features that are already on $150+ motherboards into Intel's chips.
I give this a hearty "meh."
You're fucking deranged. Integrating stuff that was previously done separately is basically the story of chip design in the last 40-50 years. It's the reason your mobile phone has gps/accelerometer/3d graphics/sound and it costs a couple of hundred dollars. You do remember when a floating point unit was a separate chip, right?
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I think more importantly, Sandy Bridge has been in scant supply for several months due to a recall. I bought the last Sandy Bridge laptop at one store and nearly 2 months later they still don't have any 1080p or better 15 or 17 inch laptops in stock. Supposedly the supply will be back by mid-May, but I had heard many manufacturers were skipping replacing Sandy Bridge laptops since both Intel and nVidia had a chip refresh coming soon (Ivy Bridge and n600 respectively). I was in a bind though, because my lapt
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I think more importantly, Sandy Bridge has been in scant supply for several months due to a recall. ...
Ummm, no. The recall was back in January of 2011 and was fully resolved by April of 2011. [tomshardware.com] This is April, yes, but given that a year has passed between that April and this April, it is safe to assume that the recall induced issues are well behind us.
Any shortages of Sandy Bridge at this point would be more likely related to OEMs allowing current inventories to drain prior to the official release of Ivy Bridge based products.
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Servers?
From TFA:
Intel has Server chipsets and Desktop chipsets, not to mention protable and specialty chipsets - this is a desktop/workstation chipset, aimed directly at the "enthusiast" market.
Intel has a tradition of not creating server drivers for desktop chipset/MB combinations, I wouldn't expect any MB maker to use a performance desktop chipset for a server MB.
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Amen to that. Throwing multiple storage controllers on separate lanes would eliminate a lot of bottlenecks for me.
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I have an AMD CPU and I got here first!
Nice try, second place.
McDonalds Competition (Score:2, Funny)
Gigabit MAC? Yum. Gigs & Gigs served.
Is that all? (Score:2, Funny)
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Fry's is very much in business. And sadly is the only electronic component store in my area.
Thoughts of their customer service make me shudder.
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You've got questions?
We've got blank stares.
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I want Fry's with that, too.
FTFY. Before someone bashes me for the apostrophe, it's a possessive.
Z71 (Score:1)
thunderbolt = only a x8 + x4 pci-e 3.0 slots (Score:2)
Now if a video card can't do pci-e 3.0 then it will only get X8 pci-e 2.0 speeds. As for duel x16 slots you may need to add a switch chip that puts out dual X16 pci-e 2.0. Most boards may have
Also the other pci-e slots / lanes (that get used by on board chips) + USB 3.0 + SATA 6.0 + gig-e may put a load on the DMI bus.
Re:thunderbolt = only a x8 + x4 pci-e 3.0 slots (Score:5, Informative)
Score: -3; Factually Incorrect
1) no, you get 16x PCIe 2.0 as a fallback if the card does not support PCIe 3.0
2) if you want SLI/CF, you can use either 8x PCIe 3.0 or 8x PCIe 2.0 for the two graphics card slots. No current graphics card saturates PCIe 2.0 8x, so this is more than sufficient for 2 way SLI/CF.
3) USB 3 and SATA 6 are not on the PCIe bus at all, so they don't leach bandwidth.
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No, GP is right and you are wrong. ... go over the DMI bus (which is 2GB/s, see above or RTFA).
RTFA.
1) if thunderbolt is enabled, you get one PCIe 3.0 x8 and Thunderbolt in x4 mode + the DMI bus which is electrically identical to PCIe 2.0 x4
2) First part is correct, 2nd is wrong. 680 and 7970 SLI/CF do measurably saturate 2.0 x8 in some games, it's only a few % but it's there.
3) Wrong. All 8 PCIe2.0 lanes, SATA2, SATA6G, USB2, USB3, GbE,
Re:thunderbolt = only a x8 + x4 pci-e 3.0 slots (Score:5, Funny)
duel x16
En garde, all sixteen of you!
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Touché!
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They can come out with as many "hardcore" boards as they want, and that will do nothing to change the fact that the Z77 chipset only adds 8 PCI-e lanes.
One nice RAID controller and you're done. Thanks a lot, Intel.
"Gigabit MAC" (Score:3)
I'm showing my age here, but I remember the days when MACs were only 48 bits.
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Awesome technology advances these days!
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Launching motherboards (Score:4, Funny)
I just have to say, back when I was doing a lot of hardware work, I would have happily launched 277 motherboards ... with a catapult.
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I dunno, I think a 12-gauge and some sort of modified clay-pigeon apparatus would be more ideal.
For added irony, you could load the shotshells with machine screws instead of buckshot.
Still only 8 lanes??? (Score:1)
What a waste of time.
Grandma's rig (Score:1)
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PCI-e on die is transformative (Score:2)
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