Link
This could be really interesting stuff. With a expected launch date around early 2012. Amd has really got there work cut out!!
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Link
This could be really interesting stuff. With a expected launch date around early 2012. Amd has really got there work cut out!!
Link
This could be really interesting stuff. With a expected launch date around early 2012. Amd has really got there work cut out!!
Tim_Millington
if it is true then it will be worth the wait, and i will keep my i7-920 until then.
It should just be a die shrink to 22nm. Extra performance would also be great! Lets wait and see though.
1 year and only 20% faster?? not worth itfishing666Obviously not aimed at the sandy bridge owners. Although 20% is a significant increase in the grand scale of things.
[QUOTE="fishing666"]1 year and only 20% faster?? not worth itxsubtownerxObviously not aimed at the sandy bridge owners. Although 20% is a significant increase in the grand scale of things.
This is for Nahelam owners, thats 3yrs old by November 2011, a big boost.
[QUOTE="JigglyWiggly_"]Meh, I doubt it ocs very well.Daytona_178Ugh, you crazy? Sandy bridge already goes to 5Ghz. And I just realized I didn't read the TC stuff and misread as AMD come back. I duno ;'(
Looks like the gap between Intel and AMD widens. At 22nm, Intel can release some super low power CPUs to replace Atom, hopefully.
[QUOTE="Tim_Millington"]
Link
This could be really interesting stuff. With a expected launch date around early 2012. Amd has really got there work cut out!!
Neo_revolution7
if it is true then it will be worth the wait, and i will keep my i7-920 until then.
thats why we chose i7' 920's and 930's at our house. 8 threads, 4 cores and apparently easy to OC. i figured programs were going for multicore instead of faster and faster cores. still i doubt i'll be upgrading by 2012 anyway, maybe 2013 (might have to be paying for kids by then ;)!!!!)
[QUOTE="Neo_revolution7"]
[QUOTE="Tim_Millington"]
Link
This could be really interesting stuff. With a expected launch date around early 2012. Amd has really got there work cut out!!
kungfool69
if it is true then it will be worth the wait, and i will keep my i7-920 until then.
thats why we chose i7' 920's and 930's at our house. 8 threads, 4 cores and apparently easy to OC. i figured programs were going for multicore instead of faster and faster cores. still i doubt i'll be upgrading by 2012 anyway, maybe 2013 (might have to be paying for kids by then ;)!!!!)
by then i still won't have kids lol, But as far as upgrading goes i'm most likly going to upgrade to an asus board and maybe get a gpu waterblock/Bay res for my system ;)
Thats if they can get working sandy bridge solutions out on the market by then.
They have working Sandy Bridge solutions out now, they just degrade your SATA over time.[QUOTE="GummiRaccoon"]They have working Sandy Bridge solutions out now, they just degrade your SATA over time.Thats if they can get working sandy bridge solutions out on the market by then.
freesafety13
IMO that doesn't count as "working."
They have working Sandy Bridge solutions out now, they just degrade your SATA over time.[QUOTE="freesafety13"][QUOTE="GummiRaccoon"]
Thats if they can get working sandy bridge solutions out on the market by then.
hartsickdiscipl
IMO that doesn't count as "working."
Exactly. I am pretty sure that this Sandy Bridge fiasco is sending ivy bridge back a few months.
Where is all the uproar? Remember when the radeon 6970s were released it was "discovered" that there was a corner cut off of one of the power connectors as a design decisionand everyone here was disgusted yet, to date there have been no issues with any of these cards because of that.
Intel messes up so bad that they have to stop all sales and recall all these parts, and everyone is giving them a pat on the back.
[QUOTE="hartsickdiscipl"]
[QUOTE="freesafety13"] They have working Sandy Bridge solutions out now, they just degrade your SATA over time.GummiRaccoon
IMO that doesn't count as "working."
Exactly. I am pretty sure that this Sandy Bridge fiasco is sending ivy bridge back a few months.
Where is all the uproar? Remember when the radeon 6970s were released it was "discovered" that there was a corner cut off of one of the power connectors as a design decisionand everyone here was disgusted yet, to date there have been no issues with any of these cards because of that.
Intel messes up so bad that they have to stop all sales and recall all these parts, and everyone is giving them a pat on the back.
Its because they are being pro-active and doing EVERYTHING possible to correct the problem. Remember, this issue takes roughly 3 years to appear, that would explain how it slipped past their QA tests. Anyway, its not a good thing thats happening, but you cant argue with their actions since they discovered it.I'm having a bigger problem with sandy bridge... my i7 2600 k only goes up to 4.44ghz stable, regardless of voltages :(JigglyWiggly_What motherboard? Also what heatsink do you have?
What motherboard? Also what heatsink do you have?[QUOTE="Daytona_178"][QUOTE="JigglyWiggly_"]I'm having a bigger problem with sandy bridge... my i7 2600 k only goes up to 4.44ghz stable, regardless of voltages :(jernas
This surely is a problem. lol
Its just that if its an Asus motherboard I will know what the exact settings he will need to get quite a bit past 4.4Ghz,,,,thats providing he is using a half-decent cooler.Asrock p67 extrem4, thermalright ultra 120x.
It's not a heat issue, it just won't boot into the OS at too high clocks. It also sometimes appears stable for LinX(Intel burn test equivelent) and stays stable for an hour, and running furmark at same time it's stable. Then like 15 min in BC2 BSOD.
At 4.44ghz it seems the most stable, 101 BCLK * 44
The auto settings in the BIOS for an auto 4.6 ghz did not work for me, but they did work for anandtech with ease.
OFC I am not really complaining, it's redic fast, my games run so much better than my old qx6700. BC2 used to be 30fps, now it's like 100fps. (My 2xgtx 460s eats my CPU, in some cases I got worse fps than my hd3870x2 because of that)
Jiggly, try these settings:
CPU multiplier: 48x
BCLK: 100
CPU Voltage: 1.35v
CPU PLL: 1.9v
VCCSA: 1.1v
VCCIO: 1.106v
Set you RAM voltage and frequency to whatever it stated on the RAM modules sticker.
Update your BIOS to the latest version and the clear the CMOS.
Turn on Load Line calibration (max setting if possible).
Turn off CPU & PCI-E spread spectrum.
Considering your reccomended multiplier is 48, I can't even get into Windows at 46, with 1.4 volts on the CPU with load line calibration at level 1. I have tried all those, except I never adjusted the VCCIO/VCCSA, will try that, maybe it'll do something.
looks promising but not waiting on it, unless bulldozer is terrible. Also, do you have a brother called Richard?emperorzhang66
Is that question to me?? If it is, no i don't have a brother called Richard. :)
[QUOTE="emperorzhang66"]looks promising but not waiting on it, unless bulldozer is terrible. Also, do you have a brother called Richard?Tim_Millington
Is that question to me?? If it is, no i don't have a brother called Richard. :)
Lol random question, know a guy called tim millington who does PC stuff (his bro called rich) :) On topic : 20% + the % of sandy bridge over 1st gen i cores is a pretty impressive jump :)[QUOTE="Tim_Millington"][QUOTE="emperorzhang66"]looks promising but not waiting on it, unless bulldozer is terrible. Also, do you have a brother called Richard?emperorzhang66
Is that question to me?? If it is, no i don't have a brother called Richard. :)
Lol random question, know a guy called tim millington who does PC stuff (his bro called rich) :) On topic : 20% + the % of sandy bridge over 1st gen i cores is a pretty impressive jump :) IF its true, i am not expecting it to be honest. Although maybe they will because they are nervous of the Bulldozer release.Please Log In to post.
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