- Jan 4, 2005
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I was wrong. Bloomie is not happening for me. Seeing this quote from Anand changed my mind:
I'd bought a new i7-950 and an EVGA GT-131 mobo from Micro Center to run it on. Kept the receipts and unopened packaging, fortunately.
Bye-bye, Bloomie. Returned the 950 and the GT-131 and picked up an Asus P8P67 mobo, the same one Anand uses in his review.
MC is having their Intel Sandy Bridge launch party on Sunday which I won't be able to make, but I can attempt to reserve a CPU online. Haven't decided whether to go for the 2500K or the 2600K. After the review, I'm not sure it matters all that much. It's hard to argue with "...the 2500K is very conservatively clocked and just begging to be overclocked." And is "an absolute steal."
Here's the thing: I'd like to be able to utilize Quick Sync, but P67 mobos can't provide it. You have to wait till Z68 comes out next quarter, which is P67 with added on-die GPU support. My guess is that you'll wind up with an enthusiast mobo that has a DVI/HDMI port on the backplate riser. The boards will cost a bit more.
Frustrating, since I wouldn't mind using Intel's new GPU right now to reduce cash flow. It seems to be plenty good enough for my immediate needs. But I wasn't willing to give away CPU overclocking just to have access to the on-die GPU.
I'd like to be able to encode even faster but it's not a total deal-breaker. I don't think I'll be in the mood to do yet another board swap so quickly afterwards and I've already delayed my build thanks to Anand ruining my life. In the interest of instant gratification, I might have to suck it up with P67. Sucks that I won't be able to use Quick Sync. Intel's marketroids still are capable of blowing it. Really - having a chip set that locks the integrated GPU away from a key market? Then again, the enthusiast community is pretty tiny.
How many of you are serious enough about the benefits of QuickSync that you'd wait another 3-4 months for the Z68 chipset boards? My guess is, anyone with an i7 build probably won't bother at all until then. What do you think?
Anand said:So where does that leave Nehalem and Gulftown owners? For the most part, the X58 platform is a dead end. While there are some niche benefits (more PCIe lanes, more memory bandwidth, 6-core support), the majority of users would be better served by Sandy Bridge on LGA-1155.
I'd bought a new i7-950 and an EVGA GT-131 mobo from Micro Center to run it on. Kept the receipts and unopened packaging, fortunately.
Bye-bye, Bloomie. Returned the 950 and the GT-131 and picked up an Asus P8P67 mobo, the same one Anand uses in his review.
MC is having their Intel Sandy Bridge launch party on Sunday which I won't be able to make, but I can attempt to reserve a CPU online. Haven't decided whether to go for the 2500K or the 2600K. After the review, I'm not sure it matters all that much. It's hard to argue with "...the 2500K is very conservatively clocked and just begging to be overclocked." And is "an absolute steal."
Here's the thing: I'd like to be able to utilize Quick Sync, but P67 mobos can't provide it. You have to wait till Z68 comes out next quarter, which is P67 with added on-die GPU support. My guess is that you'll wind up with an enthusiast mobo that has a DVI/HDMI port on the backplate riser. The boards will cost a bit more.
Frustrating, since I wouldn't mind using Intel's new GPU right now to reduce cash flow. It seems to be plenty good enough for my immediate needs. But I wasn't willing to give away CPU overclocking just to have access to the on-die GPU.
I'd like to be able to encode even faster but it's not a total deal-breaker. I don't think I'll be in the mood to do yet another board swap so quickly afterwards and I've already delayed my build thanks to Anand ruining my life. In the interest of instant gratification, I might have to suck it up with P67. Sucks that I won't be able to use Quick Sync. Intel's marketroids still are capable of blowing it. Really - having a chip set that locks the integrated GPU away from a key market? Then again, the enthusiast community is pretty tiny.
How many of you are serious enough about the benefits of QuickSync that you'd wait another 3-4 months for the Z68 chipset boards? My guess is, anyone with an i7 build probably won't bother at all until then. What do you think?
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