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    Nvidia Synergy?

    Z68 does by itself not support anything related to switchable graphics. It just adds support for the integrated GPU, which is missing in P67. Neither technologies will be supported with P67, as Dark Shroud pointed out. Even with a Z68, H67 or Q67 board the power usage isn't necessarily the same...
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    Z68 vs P67 - What's the advantage?

    I really doubt it. Unless someone gives proof otherwise I'm convinced it works. This is more of an Intel/Windows thing, not mobo configuration. If H67 keeps the GPU running when it has a monitor plugged in and Windows supports using two cards at once (which it does) you're good to go. I have a...
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    Z68 vs P67 - What's the advantage?

    I can't find a source on this, but I'm pretty sure you can use IGP + discrete graphics on H67 already (and thus Z68 also), as long as there's a monitor hooked up to both. Maybe someone with a H67 board can do a quick test? Update: found source...
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    Z68 vs P67 - What's the advantage?

    http://www.anandtech.com/show/4199/lucids-virtu-enables-simultaneous-integrateddiscrete-gpu-on-sandy-bridge-platforms It should work on both H67 and Z68 but only Z68 will give you overclocking as well. That said, Intel could just add a bios setting to leave the IGP on even with no monitor...
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    Z68 vs P67 - What's the advantage?

    Yeah it's not exactly directly from Intel. I really doubt Z68 will get Ivy Bridge and not H67 and P67 though, most of the features are identical.
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    Z68 vs P67 - What's the advantage?

    Apparently it does: http://www.fudzilla.com/processors/item/21765-ivy-bridge-22nm-works-with-h67-and-p67
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    Z68 vs P67 - What's the advantage?

    P67 does not support integrated graphics. Also, Z68 will allow you to overclock while using integrated graphics, which is not possible on H67. With the proper software (Lucid) you will be able to use Quick Sync on the integrated GPU at the same time as you use a discrete GPU.
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    Intel Q67 chipset and K-series CPUs = overclocking?

    Thanks for taking time and answering this Christian. I'm slightly disappointed but not very surprised, the Q67 is a business chipset after all. I doubt we'll see a chipset with cpu overclocking and business features any time soon. The description in the first link I posted should probably be...
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    Intel Q67 chipset and K-series CPUs = overclocking?

    :\ I'll ask Intel to clarify. The spec page is either right or wrong and they need to correct it if it's wrong. Here's a page on intel.com that does not have the sentence about overclocking: http://www.intel.com/products/desktop/chipsets/ec-q67/q67-overview.htm
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    Intel Q67 chipset and K-series CPUs = overclocking?

    Source? I found it very hard to dig up anything on this topic except that one line from Intel which is identical to the P67 description, which gave me hope. Might actually buy one to check, if it does Q67 is perfect for an overclocked work machine or a single gfx card gaming machine. (Haven't...
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    Intel Q67 chipset and K-series CPUs = overclocking?

    P67 and H67 also have only 8 pci express lanes, the rest are supplied by the cpu. Two of Intel's own Q67 boards have 16+4+1 pci express slots. My question still stands though, does it support overclocking on unlocked cpus. If so you basically have a H67 + P67 with management features.
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    Intel Q67 chipset and K-series CPUs = overclocking?

    I'm trying to figure out if Q67 supports overclocking on unlocked K-series Sandy Bridge, but the only mention of it I can find is this: http://www.intel.com/cd/products/services/emea/eng/chipsets/ec-q67/overview/468225.htm "Intel® Q67 Express Chipset also enables overclocking features of...
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    new laptop for gaming!

    MSI GT680 or Clevo P150HM might be good Sandy Bridge alternatives. P150HM can be ordered with GTX485 which is pretty crazy in a 15inch. They also have 17" version, P170HM.
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    Intel G3 SSD Roadmap

    I'd be utterly shocked if the hardware encryption doesn't have the same throughput as the drive. This isn't particularly difficult to do. Hardware implementations can easily do a lot more than the limits of the sata 6gbps bus. See e.g. VIA PadLock which is something like 5 years old. SandForce...
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    New SSD's from OCZ and Nobody has any INFO yet?

    As far as I understand it it isn't even remotely native PCI-E. It has four sandforce controllers which all have sata-interfaces, connected to a four port raid controller which has pci-x interface, which in turns connects to a pci-x to pci-express converter. It's basically something you could put...
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    OCZ Onyx 2 vs OCZ Agility 2

    The Agility 2 is also capped at 10k. The only drives with ~50k are those with "special sauce" SandForce firmware, such as the OCZ Vertex 2 and Mushkin Callisto Deluxe. I'm not really worried about the nand quality at all, you'd need some very brutal workloads to make that an issue. Onyx 2 120GB...
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    OCZ Onyx 2 vs OCZ Agility 2

    http://www.ocztechnology.com/products/solid-state-drives/sata-ii/2-5--sata-ii/mainstream-solid-state-drives/ocz-onyx-2-series-sata-ii-2-5--ssd.html...
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    Sandforce AES

    Quizzle: The effect of TRIM on a software encrypted drive is actually quite interesting. It will potentially lead to information leak of free space over time, as after all the blocks have been encrypted and you delete something TRIM should still kick inn and clear the blocks belong to that file...
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    RAID Pointless in a Home Media Server?

    I think people in general underestimate software raid, at least well implemented ones such as md on Linux. I have a software raid 6 array on Linux and the performance of the array is faster than any of the individual drives. In addition you have data safety, and multiple reads from the array at...
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    Sandforce AES

    jimhsu: Surely they have a small internal cache for the compression -> encryption process? Otherwise they'd have to write all data twice, once compressed then once more when encrypting it. Also don't forget the data travels unencrypted to the drive, so if you have physical access all bets are...
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    Sandforce AES

    Voo: You mentioned the compression, I think that's interesting as well. I'd like to see some tests on e.g. copying a 4GB zeroed file to the SSD and see what it behaves like. Does it actually make the saved space available to the OS? I'm having issues seeing how you could do that without a...
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    Sandforce AES

    Quizzle: If you look at the latest Anandtech article here: http://anandtech.com/show/3690/the-impact-of-spare-area-on-sandforce-more-capacity-at-no-performance-loss/2 The performance impact on a drive filled with random data (as would happen with encryption) isn't much to speak of to be...
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    Sandforce AES

    I'm also very interested in this. Hopefully Anand will cover this in detail at some point. As for "nobody would buy an SSD for use with cryptographic software due for performance reasons" that's not really a big issue anymore. AES-NI will be introduced in most Intel CPUs in a year or two, and...