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sweet merciful peanuts, could Intel make their naming system any more confusing?
Only quads? That explains why lga1136 and Westmere hexes were still listed as "enthusiast" solutions on another roadmap I saw on OCN.
sweet merciful peanuts, could Intel make their naming system any more confusing?
Only quads? That explains why lga1366 and Westmere hexes were still listed as "enthusiast" solutions on another roadmap I saw on OCN.
Are all of those cpus for 1156 or what?
wow a 400GB x25-e? how much will that cost 50 grand, lol? wonder if they will still use slc over mlc in the enterprise line
Is it just me or does intel bring out a new socket that's not reverse compatible every year to year and a half. On the bright side. Ya big SSD's. Hopefully this is because of some nice price cuts that'll soon be taking place in the NAND market.
X58 (LGA 1366) was released November 2008 according to wiki. But it does seem the 1156 guys are going to get screwed.
So...whats the future of 1336? (Not that I will need to upgrade the cpu for a long time)
I really don't feel like I am being screwed as a 1156 owner. Because there is nothing must have coming out with Sandy Bridge. It is just an incremental upgrade. It is nothing more than a small bump in CPU speed and ram speed with a couple of other minor things tacked on. Anyone who has a i7 860 box has 0 reason to upgrade to new CPU when they come out.
However, as I stated before, when they start releasing the 22nm Ivy Bridge CPUs, then there might be an actual reason to upgrade.
Exactly, a incremental upgrade, so did they really need to change sockets?
It's a major "tick" upgrade. Same as core 2 to the i7, or P4 -> core 2.
EOL for quite awhile now...
You don't think we'll eventually get a more mainstream 6 core part? I realize that depends on AMD showing up on the high end, but I'd hardly call the x58 "EOL" ... 1366 is still current high end. 1156 is current mainstream.
I'm completely lost now with intels naming scheme's and performance specs
it had been known gulftown would be the last new 1366 chips, even before they were released.