VirtualLarry
No Lifer
- Aug 25, 2001
 
- 56,587
 
- 10,225
 
- 126
 
He wants it the size of a Wii give or take a few inches.
Look at the Acer Revo. Atom+ION, very small package, good for media playback, not so hot for gaming.
He wants it the size of a Wii give or take a few inches.
Yep...me has a sneeking suspicion that Intel planned to have a QPI socket interface to their MIC platform, much as you are thinking with HTX, to address the network topology barrier (enabling access to those fine-grained and mild-grained apps and marketspace)...which is why there was a specific clause included in the FTC/DOJ stuff precluding Intel from moving away from PCIe for the next 6 or 7 yrs.
(who wins there? not us consumers)
Intel boards can't have QPI sockets/slots and PCIe slots at the same time?![]()
And what would be the "win" for the consumers?
Being able to choose as needed
, or having to throw away expensive Intel Fiber NICs (PCIe-based) and purchase a new one based on QPI? At the same time limiting their choices to products based on QPI (which would be "licensed" no doubt)?
It's really getting old. I think it's time for me to take a break from the forums.
PC gaming has been dead for years. What's the issue?
An on-die CPU could help discrete GPU performance quite a bit, actually...there's no reason this can't work on both sides of the bus.I think a good fusion would be moving the GPU *NEAR* the CPU, maybe even on-die, but with a huge amount of super-fast RAM near it. We need less than 20 nm to be able to move huge GPUs on die with CPU however. And I'm not even sure that will ever compete with discrete solutions.
