Originally posted by: alyarb
it'll make more sense when we get more than 16 lanes on-die.
Originally posted by: taltamir
Originally posted by: alyarb
it'll make more sense when we get more than 16 lanes on-die.
We don't need any more at the moment.
to put things in perspective... remember the rediculous NF200 chip nvidia makes? that gives more PCIe SLI lanes? that is ALL the X58 chip actually does... it is an NF200 chip from intel. everything is else is on the southbridge or the CPU... the i5 architecture gets rid of that chip... P55 is just a renamed southbridge and the CPU is now handling the pcie.
And honestly, who the hell needs two pcie v2 16x lanes? i am fine with single slot cards, or with multi gpu of cheap cards... only people doing quadfire setup really benefit from the X58 setup. and they get the "we screw you" tax from intel.
I don't know ANYONE who has 4 AMD gpus in one computer, so I don't know anyone who could even USE more than 16 lanes.
Originally posted by: taltamir
Originally posted by: alyarb
it'll make more sense when we get more than 16 lanes on-die.
We don't need any more at the moment.
to put things in perspective... remember the rediculous NF200 chip nvidia makes? that gives more PCIe SLI lanes? that is ALL the X58 chip actually does... it is an NF200 chip from intel. everything is else is on the southbridge or the CPU... the i5 architecture gets rid of that chip... P55 is just a renamed southbridge and the CPU is now handling the pcie.
And honestly, who the hell needs two pcie v2 16x lanes? i am fine with single slot cards, or with multi gpu of cheap cards... only people doing quadfire setup really benefit from the X58 setup. and they get the "we screw you" tax from intel.
I don't know ANYONE who has 4 AMD gpus in one computer, so I don't know anyone who could even USE more than 16 lanes.
Originally posted by: Zensal
No one will want to run Quad SLI/CF on a P55 mobo. The same issues exist on P45 but most people don't care because they only run 1 card.
But 2 low-end cards like the 4850's in your link are still perfectly good cards in CF at or under 1920x1200. A vast majority of people on these forums and elsewhere use monitors at or below 1920x1200.
I guess that happened when they hit ~$70AROriginally posted by: VirtualLarry
4850s are considered low-end now??!?
Originally posted by: OILFIELDTRASH
:disgust:You know the more I think about i5 the more I don't like the whole thing. First off why not just have one platform like 775. You could get yourself a decent mobo and cheap cpu. Later when you could afford it or needed the extra performance you could get a bad ass cpu then instantly you have a sweet system. So now your telling me if I want the best performance I'm gonna have to buy $1000 cpu's. WTF. I now am being priced out of top tier computing. Not because I can't afford it but because to me $1000 cpu prices are ridiculous for something that does not contribute to my livelyhood. It looked like i7 was heading in the right direction. Mobo's were coming down in price. The cpu's were reasonable. Now if I buy an i7 platform(even though its affordable now) later on if I want a better cpu I'm gonna shell out close to a thousand dollars. Mobo prices will also be incredibly high as mentioned in articles since the new i7 buyers will be high dollar spenders.
Intel is just getting greedy. Hell it seemed they were doing pretty well. They just got fined for billions of dollars and it still hasn't affected day to day operations.
I'm seriously considering another hobby. I will not be intel's bitch.
Originally posted by: OILFIELDTRASH
:disgust:You know the more I think about i5 the more I don't like the whole thing. First off why not just have one platform like 775. You could get yourself a decent mobo and cheap cpu. Later when you could afford it or needed the extra performance you could get a bad ass cpu then instantly you have a sweet system. So now your telling me if I want the best performance I'm gonna have to buy $1000 cpu's. WTF. I now am being priced out of top tier computing. Not because I can't afford it but because to me $1000 cpu prices are ridiculous for something that does not contribute to my livelyhood. It looked like i7 was heading in the right direction. Mobo's were coming down in price. The cpu's were reasonable. Now if I buy an i7 platform(even though its affordable now) later on if I want a better cpu I'm gonna shell out close to a thousand dollars. Mobo prices will also be incredibly high as mentioned in articles since the new i7 buyers will be high dollar spenders.
Intel is just getting greedy. Hell it seemed they were doing pretty well. They just got fined for billions of dollars and it still hasn't affected day to day operations.
I'm seriously considering another hobby. I will not be intel's bitch.
Originally posted by: MrK6
Wow, that's kind of disappointing. I still don't see any reason to upgrade from my Q6600. If the power consumption numbers were better, maybe, but it'd be a side-step rather than an upgrade anyway.
Originally posted by: Shaq
Originally posted by: OILFIELDTRASH
:disgust:You know the more I think about i5 the more I don't like the whole thing. First off why not just have one platform like 775. You could get yourself a decent mobo and cheap cpu. Later when you could afford it or needed the extra performance you could get a bad ass cpu then instantly you have a sweet system. So now your telling me if I want the best performance I'm gonna have to buy $1000 cpu's. WTF. I now am being priced out of top tier computing. Not because I can't afford it but because to me $1000 cpu prices are ridiculous for something that does not contribute to my livelyhood. It looked like i7 was heading in the right direction. Mobo's were coming down in price. The cpu's were reasonable. Now if I buy an i7 platform(even though its affordable now) later on if I want a better cpu I'm gonna shell out close to a thousand dollars. Mobo prices will also be incredibly high as mentioned in articles since the new i7 buyers will be high dollar spenders.
Intel is just getting greedy. Hell it seemed they were doing pretty well. They just got fined for billions of dollars and it still hasn't affected day to day operations.
I'm seriously considering another hobby. I will not be intel's bitch.
775 isn't enough pins for all the components they added on the die of the i5/i7 (integrated memory controller etc.). You don't have to buy the $1000 6 core CPU. The 4 core i7 should be plenty until Sandy Bridge comes out next year and its mainstream variants in 2011. There should be a $300 version then also. You also forgot about overclocking so you can buy a $250 CPU and make it faster than a $1000 CPU.
Originally posted by: Zensal
Originally posted by: Shaq
Originally posted by: OILFIELDTRASH
:disgust:You know the more I think about i5 the more I don't like the whole thing. First off why not just have one platform like 775. You could get yourself a decent mobo and cheap cpu. Later when you could afford it or needed the extra performance you could get a bad ass cpu then instantly you have a sweet system. So now your telling me if I want the best performance I'm gonna have to buy $1000 cpu's. WTF. I now am being priced out of top tier computing. Not because I can't afford it but because to me $1000 cpu prices are ridiculous for something that does not contribute to my livelyhood. It looked like i7 was heading in the right direction. Mobo's were coming down in price. The cpu's were reasonable. Now if I buy an i7 platform(even though its affordable now) later on if I want a better cpu I'm gonna shell out close to a thousand dollars. Mobo prices will also be incredibly high as mentioned in articles since the new i7 buyers will be high dollar spenders.
Intel is just getting greedy. Hell it seemed they were doing pretty well. They just got fined for billions of dollars and it still hasn't affected day to day operations.
I'm seriously considering another hobby. I will not be intel's bitch.
775 isn't enough pins for all the components they added on the die of the i5/i7 (integrated memory controller etc.). You don't have to buy the $1000 6 core CPU. The 4 core i7 should be plenty until Sandy Bridge comes out next year and its mainstream variants in 2011. There should be a $300 version then also. You also forgot about overclocking so you can buy a $250 CPU and make it faster than a $1000 CPU.
What OILFIELDTRASH is trying to say is that instead of having 2 different sockets and 2 different platforms you should just have LGA-1366. Just like 775 was. You still had the P45 vs X48 but the processors were drop in upgrades. There was no technical reason that it couldn't have been done the same way as 775.
Originally posted by: Zensal
Originally posted by: Shaq
Originally posted by: OILFIELDTRASH
:disgust:You know the more I think about i5 the more I don't like the whole thing. First off why not just have one platform like 775. You could get yourself a decent mobo and cheap cpu. Later when you could afford it or needed the extra performance you could get a bad ass cpu then instantly you have a sweet system. So now your telling me if I want the best performance I'm gonna have to buy $1000 cpu's. WTF. I now am being priced out of top tier computing. Not because I can't afford it but because to me $1000 cpu prices are ridiculous for something that does not contribute to my livelyhood. It looked like i7 was heading in the right direction. Mobo's were coming down in price. The cpu's were reasonable. Now if I buy an i7 platform(even though its affordable now) later on if I want a better cpu I'm gonna shell out close to a thousand dollars. Mobo prices will also be incredibly high as mentioned in articles since the new i7 buyers will be high dollar spenders.
Intel is just getting greedy. Hell it seemed they were doing pretty well. They just got fined for billions of dollars and it still hasn't affected day to day operations.
I'm seriously considering another hobby. I will not be intel's bitch.
775 isn't enough pins for all the components they added on the die of the i5/i7 (integrated memory controller etc.). You don't have to buy the $1000 6 core CPU. The 4 core i7 should be plenty until Sandy Bridge comes out next year and its mainstream variants in 2011. There should be a $300 version then also. You also forgot about overclocking so you can buy a $250 CPU and make it faster than a $1000 CPU.
What OILFIELDTRASH is trying to say is that instead of having 2 different sockets and 2 different platforms you should just have LGA-1366. Just like 775 was. You still had the P45 vs X48 but the processors were drop in upgrades. There was no technical reason that it couldn't have been done the same way as 775.
Originally posted by: Idontcare
Even if Intel made the i5 (lynnfield) to be socket-compatible with the i7 (bloomfield), the motherboard itself would not be compatible with both CPUs as the supporting chipsets for the CPUs are different.
Imagine the customer confusion when they have to figure out whether their LGA1366 motherboard has the right chipset to support Bloomfield (communicates via QPI with the X58 chipset and PCIe lanes from there) or whether the motherboard contains all the electronics and path traces needed to support Lynnfield (on-die PCIe, communicates externally via DMI link to P55 chipset)
Even in the day of LGA775 the server world had LGA771. Xeons were made for both sockets. All Intel did with bloomfield is reduce the supported socket count from two to just the one. Now both desktop and server sockets for bloomfield uses the same socket LGA1366 (not talking about Beckton, which is not bloomfield, just talking bloomfield here).
So now in world of nehalem we have two sockets still, LGA1156 and LGA1366. I don't get what the "beef" is with this. The two chips are electrically incompatible with each other as they communicate with the motherboard differently for a very good reason...bloomfield is meant to be multi-socket capable and that requires QPI. Lynnfield is meant to be single-socket and aimed at people who care about things connected to the PCIe (i.e. gamers and their GPU's) so its tailored for that purpose.
Originally posted by: Shaq
Originally posted by: taltamir
Originally posted by: alyarb
it'll make more sense when we get more than 16 lanes on-die.
We don't need any more at the moment.
to put things in perspective... remember the rediculous NF200 chip nvidia makes? that gives more PCIe SLI lanes? that is ALL the X58 chip actually does... it is an NF200 chip from intel. everything is else is on the southbridge or the CPU... the i5 architecture gets rid of that chip... P55 is just a renamed southbridge and the CPU is now handling the pcie.
And honestly, who the hell needs two pcie v2 16x lanes? i am fine with single slot cards, or with multi gpu of cheap cards... only people doing quadfire setup really benefit from the X58 setup. and they get the "we screw you" tax from intel.
I don't know ANYONE who has 4 AMD gpus in one computer, so I don't know anyone who could even USE more than 16 lanes.
There was a review that showed a GTX 280 gaining FPS going from a PCI-E 1.0 to 2.0. One G300 will come close to maxxing out a 2.0 slot if the rumors are true. There should be 3.0 spec motherboards next year. Plus people don't generally upgrade CPU's every year so that bandwidth needs to last 2-3 years or more. Bottom line is you can never have too much bandwidth or speed or power...only for the moment.
Originally posted by: aigomorla
taltamir b4 u continue with your debate, have you seen an i5 overclocked?
Can they even overclock? i can care less about turbo on if i cant overclock the cpu.
also rumor has it they have a massively high QPI which makes QPI overclocking near impossible.
Originally posted by: Zensal
Originally posted by: Idontcare
Even if Intel made the i5 (lynnfield) to be socket-compatible with the i7 (bloomfield), the motherboard itself would not be compatible with both CPUs as the supporting chipsets for the CPUs are different.
Imagine the customer confusion when they have to figure out whether their LGA1366 motherboard has the right chipset to support Bloomfield (communicates via QPI with the X58 chipset and PCIe lanes from there) or whether the motherboard contains all the electronics and path traces needed to support Lynnfield (on-die PCIe, communicates externally via DMI link to P55 chipset)
Even in the day of LGA775 the server world had LGA771. Xeons were made for both sockets. All Intel did with bloomfield is reduce the supported socket count from two to just the one. Now both desktop and server sockets for bloomfield uses the same socket LGA1366 (not talking about Beckton, which is not bloomfield, just talking bloomfield here).
So now in world of nehalem we have two sockets still, LGA1156 and LGA1366. I don't get what the "beef" is with this. The two chips are electrically incompatible with each other as they communicate with the motherboard differently for a very good reason...bloomfield is meant to be multi-socket capable and that requires QPI. Lynnfield is meant to be single-socket and aimed at people who care about things connected to the PCIe (i.e. gamers and their GPU's) so its tailored for that purpose.
I'm just saying why not use QPI on Lynnfield also? Intel could have limited the bandwidth between the CPU and the IOH to make the P55 chipset less attractive (and thus cheaper) then the X58. Lynnfield could also still use dual channel memory instead of triple channel. And the IOH with QPI is not expensive to manufacture. Intel prices the X58 chipset artificially high.
Originally posted by: taltamir
DMI is much much cheaper.
Originally posted by: taltamir
DMI is not compatible with QPI.
Originally posted by: taltamir
QPI is really more for 8 socket systems.
Hence the need for two different sockets.
Anand's lynfield article said so.Not going to dispute that as I haven't seen any BOM cost breakdowns or analyses.
But I would like to see one, so I'm compelled to ask you "how do you know?" in hopes of a link or something coming out of it so I can educate myself.
When I say non compatible I mean you can't just replace the DMI for QPI and have it on the same exactly electrical connections, you would be putting a DMI communicating CPU into a socket that transmits it to the X58 northbridge which expects QPI and QPI only. there is just no way that the X58 can just accept that and work.That statement makes little sense to me, so I guess I am missing some technical documentations on the DMI specs that would make it self-evident to me as to why DMI is incompatible with QPI.
Why (or rather, how) is DMI incompatible with QPI?
If it is abundantly clear then why ask? this is what I was referring to.It's been made quite clear that Lynnfield uses DMI, and thus LGA1156 cannot be made to be electrically compatible with LGA1366
Anand said cost.but what hasn't been well communicated is why Lynnfield requires DMI.
QPI can do 1S to 8S specifically. QPI enables up to 8S systems.QPI is needed for 2S and more
Originally posted by: taltamir
Anand's lynfield article said so.Not going to dispute that as I haven't seen any BOM cost breakdowns or analyses.
But I would like to see one, so I'm compelled to ask you "how do you know?" in hopes of a link or something coming out of it so I can educate myself.
Originally posted by: taltamir
Anand said cost.but what hasn't been well communicated is why Lynnfield requires DMI.
Originally posted by: taltamir
When I say non compatible I mean you can't just replace the DMI for QPI and have it on the same exactly electrical connections, you would be putting a DMI communicating CPU into a socket that transmits it to the X58 northbridge which expects QPI and QPI only. there is just no way that the X58 can just accept that and work.That statement makes little sense to me, so I guess I am missing some technical documentations on the DMI specs that would make it self-evident to me as to why DMI is incompatible with QPI.
Why (or rather, how) is DMI incompatible with QPI?
If it is abundantly clear then why ask? this is what I was referring to.It's been made quite clear that Lynnfield uses DMI, and thus LGA1156 cannot be made to be electrically compatible with LGA1366
Originally posted by: taltamir
QPI can do 1S to 8S specifically. QPI enables up to 8S systems.QPI is needed for 2S and more
