Read more.Mainstream Nehalem draws near, but will Lynnfield parts branded as both Core i5 and Core i7 cause confusion?
Read more.Mainstream Nehalem draws near, but will Lynnfield parts branded as both Core i5 and Core i7 cause confusion?
Core i7 860 seems to be the sweet chip! it maybe time to upgrade this old rig.
860? Why not 920? Same price chip, I picked up my 1366 motherboard for 115 quid and 3GB tri-channel ram for 39 quid. Triple channel memory will help on those intensive CPU apps, and you'll be able to pop in those hexacores when they appear on the roadmap as you'll be on the 1366 platform.
Fraz (23-07-2009)
Same here ^ i7 still seems quite attractive even if the QPI & tri-channel memory arent that useful, good to know youve got em
Just to confirm, are they discontinuing the 920, 950 and 975?
I'd still love to pick a 920 up when EVGA finally releases their mATX Classified board, but it may be a while from now and I'd like to know if I could still pick one of these up in say 6 months time?
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Thanks, looks like I will get my i7 rig after all .
They've stopped the 940 and 965, which are replaced by the 950/975.
For the day-to-day consumer, 775 will continue for mainstream, 1136 for performance and 1366 for high-end. Where the confusion will lie is whether your core i3/i5/i7 chip will be 775, 1136 or 1366.
In terms of scientific computing, the extra memory bandwidth the i7/triple channel memory provides is worth it. That, and some CUDA/Stream performance.
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