taltamir
Lifer
I did not make the assumption that it is completely clear to everyone reading it. To you and me it is, but to some it might not be clear.it is quite clear they are not electrically compatible hence my confusion on why anyone, yourself included, would bother stating something that simply need not be stated?
My point was more of "X58 was designed with QPI only input in mind, now they are making DMI chips, if they do not change the socket someone will put a DMI chip into an X58 mobo and it will mess things up, hence a different socket"
Pretty much.To be pragmatic about it, x58 not accepting DMI inputs is simply a matter of engineering/management decisions during the design phase, i.e. the decision was made to have the x58 not support DMI.
Then i misread. in which case you seem to be right, I do not know weather it is more costly or if it is just an unexplained and pointless complication...Anand's article spoke about platform/chipset pricing, nothing about interface topology costs. I just read it again to confirm my initial impressions weren't misguided. He's quite clear about it with repetitious use of the wording.
Further he said Intel prices the x58 at a premium, not that it cost a premium to implement/produce/manufacture. He further stipulated that Intel's decision was to not lower the price on x58 but rather to introduce a lower-price DMI-based product (again, emphasis is on price to the consumer, i.e. market segmentation, not cost or gross margins impact on Intel's side of it).
Maybe it is marketing, maybe there is some cost we are not aware of (board production cost maybe? power consumption?)
wait... power consumption... isn't QPI more power hungry?