Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
Upgrades

Intel Core I7 Launched, Nehalem and X58 Tested 194

MojoKid writes "Today marks the official launch of Intel's new Core i7 processor, the most major overhaul of Intel's core processor architecture since the release of their Core 2 design. As has been reported, the Core i7 is a major departure from Intel's aging Front Side Bus architecture of old, now replaced by Intel's QPI (Quick Path Interconnect) serial links. This 20 lane bi-directional (40 lanes total) point-to-point connection provides 6.4 GT/s of bandwidth and scalability for future multi-socket designs as well. In addition, the Core i7 now has an integrated triple channel memory controller offering over 3X the bandwidth of the previous Core 2 architecture with DDR3 system memory. Though the product is set to ship in volume later this month, the early benchmark numbers show Intel's new chip is markedly faster clock-for-clock versus their previous generation CPU and much faster than anything AMD has out currently."

Comment OS X technical notes (Score 1) 1147

Hello
I have some updated information on OS X.2. The OS X.2 kernel has been synced with freebsd 4.4-5. Also the userland has been synced with freebsd 4.4-5 also. As for the freebsd kernel running on a mach microkernel that's not true. Basically the bottom half of the fbsd kernel has been taken fon and the mach kernel provides the hardware abstraction. The interesting part is that the fbsd and mach parts work as one in a single address space just like a standard monolithic fbsd or linux kernel for that matter. The OS X kernel is not a microkernel architecture.

Regards,

Eric

Slashdot Top Deals

It appears that PL/I (and its dialects) is, or will be, the most widely used higher level language for systems programming. -- J. Sammet

Working...