Reason, the power rating will be raised from 60 w to 70w for the onboard PWM supplies.
Motherboard makers revealed plans to launch two board versions for each of their primary product lines in the fourth quarter in order to accommodate both Intel?s current and new Pentium 4 processors, which will be running at clock speeds over 3GHz.
Requiring 70W power supplies, the new P4 processor is incompatible with present motherboards, which only support the 60W standard, board manufacturers said. For the technology update, companies need to change the on-board PWN (pulse width modulation) controller IC design from three-phase mode to four-phase. In addition, to pack in an increased number of components, board makers have to rearrange the circuit layouts as well.
Full story
Off cource people here will run it without issue more then likely. Then again...
Motherboard makers revealed plans to launch two board versions for each of their primary product lines in the fourth quarter in order to accommodate both Intel?s current and new Pentium 4 processors, which will be running at clock speeds over 3GHz.
Requiring 70W power supplies, the new P4 processor is incompatible with present motherboards, which only support the 60W standard, board manufacturers said. For the technology update, companies need to change the on-board PWN (pulse width modulation) controller IC design from three-phase mode to four-phase. In addition, to pack in an increased number of components, board makers have to rearrange the circuit layouts as well.
Full story
Off cource people here will run it without issue more then likely. Then again...
