By Anonymous CowardPosted Thursday 4th September 2008 12:46 GMT
Something like the Abit P35 Pro is so easy to obtain improbably high stable overclocks with, while all the P45 based boards I've tried are quite fiddly and just don't deliver the same results. While you can sometimes approach P35 levels of performance, stability just isn't there. Eventually you end up settling for less performance, which is hardly progress, is it?
Either P45 is a blind alley, or Intel's just abandoning the overclocker community.
Definitely eaves you wondering about the future...
Will I be running a P35 based system in 2010 that still runs faster than the current state of the art?
By Sergie KaponitoviczPosted Thursday 4th September 2008 15:11 GMT
ditto that @ James Anderson. Reminds me of the Australian equivalent of Sellotape. I think it was no more than 2 seasons before Formula 1 cars stopped roaring around European Grand Prix circuits with Durex plastered all over them.
By kain preacherPosted Thursday 4th September 2008 15:35 GMT
Australia at least: An American actress told a story once how she did an interview show in Aus., and she told a story about her car, saying that she pulled over & popped the trunk open. She said then the audience sort of gasped.
By Alan BrownPosted Saturday 6th September 2008 18:02 GMT
8Gb vs 16Gb might not seem real worldly, but I have Q35 desktops deployed with 8Gb already and the entire ram complement is being used. If 16Gb was available, I'd deploy it.
Why? Astrophysicists eat ram.
The alternative to putting this amount of ram in a personal desktop system is buying in servers which cost 5-10 times as much and then having them fight over CPU time. This results in less effective work.
Comments on: Intel P45 desktop chipset
Dangers of Cross Cultural Misunderstangs #
By James Anderson Posted Thursday 4th September 2008 11:40 GMT
ICH10 #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 4th September 2008 12:45 GMT
I'd tend to agree #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 4th September 2008 12:46 GMT
End of line #
By Joseph Haig Posted Thursday 4th September 2008 12:52 GMT
@ James Anderson #
By Sergie Kaponitovicz Posted Thursday 4th September 2008 14:40 GMT
@ Joseph Haig #
By Sergie Kaponitovicz Posted Thursday 4th September 2008 15:11 GMT
Dangers of Cross Cultural Misunderstangs #
By kain preacher Posted Thursday 4th September 2008 15:35 GMT
8/16GB #
By Alan Brown Posted Saturday 6th September 2008 18:02 GMT