- Oct 9, 2002
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I should have done my research 
My new build is going to be way more expensive than I had anticipated. On Sunday, I drove 1.5 hours away to Microcenter and bought an Intel Haswell Core i7 4770K from Microcenter with an Asrock Z87E-ITX board. Before this, multiple people told me "get the K" and "you want to get the K." As an on-again/off-again enthusiast, I was pretty sure it was the right choice. I opened the box and put the CPU in the socket...but I haven't technically "installed" it because I haven't attached a cooler of any kind (I haven't even ordered the cooling solution, PSU, or RAM).
VT-d matters *way* more to me than overclocking. I probably wouldn't even bother to try an overclock. Do you think Microcenter would let me exchange it for a non-K part? It would take me 1.5 hours of driving to get there and I'd have to wait a few more days due to this ice storm.
Anyway, it bugs me to think that Intel disabled VT-d for no real reason. Is there an actual reason for it?
My new build is going to be way more expensive than I had anticipated. On Sunday, I drove 1.5 hours away to Microcenter and bought an Intel Haswell Core i7 4770K from Microcenter with an Asrock Z87E-ITX board. Before this, multiple people told me "get the K" and "you want to get the K." As an on-again/off-again enthusiast, I was pretty sure it was the right choice. I opened the box and put the CPU in the socket...but I haven't technically "installed" it because I haven't attached a cooler of any kind (I haven't even ordered the cooling solution, PSU, or RAM).
VT-d matters *way* more to me than overclocking. I probably wouldn't even bother to try an overclock. Do you think Microcenter would let me exchange it for a non-K part? It would take me 1.5 hours of driving to get there and I'd have to wait a few more days due to this ice storm.
Anyway, it bugs me to think that Intel disabled VT-d for no real reason. Is there an actual reason for it?