Shintai
Supreme [H]ardness
- Joined
- Jul 1, 2016
- Messages
- 5,678
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So that's 1636 more pins than LGA 2011. What are they going to do with all of those pins?
Give it 22 cores and 44 threads.So that's 1636 more pins than LGA 2011. What are they going to do with all of those pins?
Give it 22 cores and 44 threads.
Do Want. Do Want SO BAD. Hopefully the Skylake-E and Skylake-X chips allow BCLK overclocking like the 1150 chips do...
Even Better!!!You get up to 28 cores and 56 threads with Skylake-EP.
So that's 1636 more pins than LGA 2011. What are they going to do with all of those pins?
I just bought a water block I was hoping would last a while. That was a reasonable expectation since they have more or less been identical forever now, just with different mounting hardware on occasion.
What are they doing with all these extra pins? More PCIe Lanes? What does "bifurcation support" mean in this context?
I'm all for this, but I am guessing it also means we will need all new coolers?
I just bought a water block I was hoping would last a while. That was a reasonable expectation since they have more or less been identical forever now, just with different mounting hardware on occasion.
What are they doing with all these extra pins? More PCIe Lanes? What does "bifurcation support" mean in this context?
I'm all for this, but I am guessing it also means we will need all new coolers?
I just bought a water block I was hoping would last a while. That was a reasonable expectation since they have more or less been identical forever now, just with different mounting hardware on occasion.
So that's 1636 more pins than LGA 2011. What are they going to do with all of those pins?
I'm going to like this in a few years when companies start dumping their old hardware and you can get a couple of these for $100... Might take 7-9 years, but I can wait...
Outside of highend servers ? Nothing, don't expect this as a replacement for S2011-3 enthusiast CPU. And for the actual computers which will use this CPU, it will be used probably for better inter-CPU communication, more RAM channels, more PCI-E, stuff like that.
Strictly speaking Intel always had a Xeon-only socket since Core 2. Simply, it's the first time mid-range servers will use different socket from enthusiast i7s.Right, for the first time in awhile, Intel is creating a super-high-end Xeon-only socket. Cause 4 ram channels is not going to be enough to feed these beasts. With the memory controllers integrated, it was bound to happen sooner or later.
But HEDT platforms should be just fine with quad channel for some time
Strictly speaking Intel always had a Xeon-only socket since Core 2.
Yeah, i should have written "since at least Core 2".Incorrect.
Intel has had Xeon only sockets since the Pentium II Xeon back in 1998. Though technically it was a slot and not a socket (Slot 2) SECC.
Six-Chanel DDR4.
Cool, it's Pentium Pro V2.
So that's 1636 more pins than LGA 2011. What are they going to do with all of those pins?
It's Xeon Phi/Skylake Xeon socket.So is this the 2011-V3 replacement?
When do we think this platform will be out?
Sorry, bear with me, I'm a little out of the loop.
What is the home enthusiast platform replacement (i.e. the X99 / 2011-v3 replacement)? And when can we expect to see it? I'm understanding correctly, Broadwell-E came out earlier this year (2016).