Intel X38 High End Chipset Launch and Benchmarks 87
MojoKid writes "Though many leaks of the product have been circulating for some time, Intel officially took the wraps off and launched their new X38 Express chipset for the high-end desktop motherboard market. With this launch, the Intel desktop chipset line-up gets a new flagship. Intel's new X38 chipset encompasses all of the technology advances that have made the P35 a success and adds a slew of new features designed to increase memory and graphics subsystem performance, like PCI Express 2.0 SerDes and Intel Extreme Memory technology in the new X38 MCH. The Asus motherboard tested by HotHardware even features an embedded Linux-based OS that boots in a matter a seconds."
I thought high end meant Xeon? (Score:1)
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Re:I thought high end meant Xeon? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:I thought high end meant Xeon? (Score:5, Interesting)
You can have a Xeon desktop. Hell, I have a dual Opteron desktop. It would be called a "workstation".
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Dell Vostro Desktops
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Intel has always marketed the Xeon as a high end CPU for server and workstation applications. If you're going to try to be pedantic, at least be accurate about it.
Re:I thought high end meant Xeon? (Score:4, Funny)
ok, but will it run... (Score:3, Funny)
Yes (Score:1, Funny)
After having tried Vista at work, the partition, i had set up for my third os, soon became infected with ubuntu.
Not all infections are bad
Apple next? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Apple next? (Score:4, Interesting)
And apple will making a dumb move by going with over priced DDR3 that is not much faster then much cheaper DDR2 ram.
Dreaming... (Score:2)
I think you're dreaming. Apple wants people to use minis for home entertainment centers, not to use them for anything that requires oomph. I'd love them to do something like that as well, but once bitten...
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The same Apple that has stuck with DD2-667 even on their high-end workstations, despite there being faster DDR2 clocks? Apple doesn't look like they're the type to cash in on the newest buzzword-tech, which is sometimes good, and sometimes bad (I do wish the Mac Pros would ship with something a tad faster than DDR2-667...)
Mac Pros use FBD, not DDR2.Re: (Score:2)
This may mean we'll soon see a Mac hardware announcement from Apple that uses X38.
We may be dreamin' (as another comment in this thread said), but I think this would be a great chipset for the mythical "xMac" or "Mac XL" for all those desktop buyers who don't want an underpowered SFF (Mac mini), an all-in-one with few options (iMac), or an overpowered dual-processor workstation (Mac Pro).
The X38 chipset offers Apple a choice of implementing four DDR2 or DDR3 slots, which are both better options than the iMac's two SO-DIMM slots or the Mac Pro's FB-DIMM slots. The CPU socket will accep
Icarus (Score:1)
Re:Icarus (Score:4, Funny)
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no emotional involvement? (Score:1)
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Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:DDR3 ECC supported! (Score:4, Informative)
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It seems to me that a high-end motherboard chipset should support ECC features, but that doesn't mean that it does.
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Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
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Maybe the cause is cost or marketing?
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Them Taiwanese mobo guys are shiftier than a bad transmission, never ASSUME they mean anything.
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boots in a matter of seconds (Score:1, Insightful)
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Intel and Linux (Score:5, Informative)
Misjudgement (Score:2)
Re:Intel and Linux (Score:5, Informative)
Although Intel's Linux driver support is pretty good on the whole, the integrated OS is a feature of the ASUS motherboard and isn't a product of Intel's good will toward Linux.
There was a previous Slashdot feature specifically covering that [slashdot.org], if you want more information.
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Intel maybe be driver friendly when it comes to video and wireless devices, but they are sorely lacking in the LinuxBIOS dept or any other open BIOS for that matter. Most of the motherboards supported by LinuxBIOS are on AMD or NVIDIA chip sets. Intel is still trying to push EFI, which Linus, on the LKML, called: "this other Intel brain-damage (the first one being ACPI)".
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It is far more important to have decent drivers to be able to use the hardware under a specific OS.
For 99 percent of the users there will be absolutely no need to look at an alternative bios for their system. The bios supplied by the manufacurer is all they need.
I am one of those people. I want my hardware to work and I see no reason to replace my bios with an open source version. The one Asus supplied does its job.
Arguments like 'but it
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Please, Intel and AMD, get into a war of openness one-upmanship. Everyone benefits.
Cool, but... (Score:4, Funny)
Express Gate appz (Score:2, Interesting)
This m
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Benchmark result: (Score:3, Informative)
Seriously, why even bother benchmarking?
You buy those boards for compatibilty, or for their features, but not because they are _faster_....
(extreme overclockers excluded. Some board may be better suited for FSB overclocking).
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extreme overclockers excluded. Some board may be better suited for FSB overclocking
thats exactly who this product is primarily being marketed for. tho it remains a fairly valid question, why bother with benchmarks, unless of course the benchmarks are actually to see how far the mobo can overclock.
Open Solaris (Score:2)
I'm looking for a board that supports at least a 6 SATA drive RAID.
Intel's X48 to Come in Just Another 5 Weeks !! (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.dvhardware.net/article22289.html [dvhardware.net]
It appears the X48 chipset is actually the X38 chipset without the ECC support and for DDR3 Only? Great, just when we weren't confused!
Here's another X38 review: http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/intel/showdoc.aspx?i=3120 [anandtech.com]
A chipset comparison graphic: http://images.anandtech.com/reviews/chipsets/intel/x38-launch/memory-lg.png [anandtech.com]
And another review: http://www.tomshardware.com/2007/09/26/intel_x38_chipset/ [tomshardware.com]
A Gamer's Dream? (Score:5, Insightful)
I find it odd the reviewers even recommended the board (the survivor-- they were skeptical of the dead one). I don't understand the attraction of a board/chipset like this! It's going to take another generation of hardware to take advantage of the 32 simultaneous 32 bit video data "lanes" on each PCI-E (or X or whatever) slot. And eventually, maybe DDR3 will drop in price when there's some demand for it. And all the I/O (8 USB 2.0 ports and external SATA ports and optical and coax digital AV) seem like they could come in handy. But seriously, why are they making these now? Is it for the quad-core support? Do other chipsets support quad-core Intels? Or is it because they allow plugging in not one but two $500+ dollar video cards?
I look forward to lots of serious gamers buying these, devising new benchmarks to prove their efficacy, and bringing down the cost for this point of entry into the market for the rest of us. But gamers! Read the review and benchmarks. This chipset does not, at least based on this review, demonstrate a big leap forward.
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Wake me up when ... (Score:2)
... it supports ECC DDR3 at 1333 and TWO Xeon quad core processors all in an ATX form factor.
Performance (Score:1, Troll)
anybody know if it will run ESX 3.02 VI (Score:1)
Full Version Article Is Here (Score:2)
Please mod this up for all.
Here is the full version article: http://www.hothardware.com/Articles/Intel_X38_Express_Chipset_Debuts/ [hothardware.com]
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Dissapointed (Score:2)
So, if you are building a new system, get a cheap full featured P965 for just 100$.
Intel