Processador Intel Sandy Bridge - 2100 / 2400 / 2500(K) / 2600(K) / 2700k - Socket 1155/2011

A plataforma E socket 2011 só sai no final de 2011. Primeiro sairá a mainstream 1155. Acabo por não perceber essa jogada da Intel, dado que o socket 1156 é mais recente que o 1366, de qualquer maneira são boas notícias para quem tem 1366, porque só têm algo acima no final de 2011.
 
A Asrock ja mostra boards para o sucessor do 1156 na computex 2010

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Intel's P67 chipset on the ASRock P67 Extreme 3 motherboard here at Computex 2010.
 
as noticias lançadas pela intel nao serao um pouco especulativas sobre ser 20% mais rapido, e 70 watts? pergunto isto pq nao seria a 1º vez q eles tentaram especular. Ja com o larabee foi um projecto ambicioso e correu mal.
 
Asus e Msi tambem com propostas para o novo socket

ASUS and MSI Show off LGA-1155 Motherboards based on P67 Chipset
Following Biostar's display of its socket LGA-1155 motherboard, market-heavyweights ASUS and MSI were also seen exhibiting their LGA-1156 motherboards based on the Intel P67 chipset. The ASUS P8P67D EVO uses 12+2 phase CPU VRM, has four DIMM slots for dual-channel DDR3 memory, and expansion slots which include two PCI-Express x16 (electrical x8 when both are populated), two PCI, and three PCI-E x1. MSI's P67A-GD65 uses an 8+1 phase VRM with High-C capacitors. Both models feature SATA 6 Gb/s, USB 3.0, and other features commonly found in today's P55-based motherboards, with the difference of the LGA-1155 socket that will fit next-generation Sandy Bridge processors. LGA-1155 is not compatible with LGA-1156, probably except for the cooler mount hole spacing. LGA-1155 platform will likely be introduced in early 2011, looking at how major motherboard vendors are ready with their products in time for this year's Computex event, which is the large major IT exposium before next year's CES.

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Ambas boas, mas o prémio deve ir para a Asus por melhor dissipação nos VRM... Na MSI não há. Porém, ainda são versoes de teste
 
Mas que vai acontecer ao meu 1156..já está out of market....e eu que gosto tanto dele.....não fazem 6 cores para o 1156?


Não está nada previsto. Espera-se 6 cores ( sem ser Extreme Edition ) no socket 1366 e devem sair algo carotes. Mas já há bastante tempo que se preve esta cenário de morte precose do socket 1156.
 
Não está nada previsto. Espera-se 6 cores ( sem ser Extreme Edition ) no socket 1366 e devem sair algo carotes. Mas já há bastante tempo que se preve esta cenário de morte precose do socket 1156.

É desta que tomo juizo tal aconteça....andam a brincar com a malta!! É caso para dizer " Intel vai para os tomates" o que vale ..e penso ter máquina potente o suficiente para pelo menos 2 anos!!
 
Esta plataforma da Intel parece muito interessante..

Cada vez é mais engraçado assistir à evolução CPU/GPU
Cada vez mais é mais facil usufruir de Low gaming, Internet, HD movies
Através de pouco dinheiro, poucas peças (tendo em conta que vai tudo para o CPU) e com excelentes consumos
Permitindo poupar na fonte de alimentação e no espaço dentra da caixa..

Cada vez vemos os PC's a ficarem mais pequenos..
Acho que a evolução está a tomar optimos rumos para um utilizador comum de trabalho médio/leve..

Mais tarde só se justifica uma grafica sem ser onboard para gaming ou trabalho profissional pesado,
e mesmo assim nunca será necessario e cada vez menos espetarem tanto dinheiro em High-end..

Cumps..
 
o 1366 já dura há algum tempo sempre por cima, e até ao fim de 2011 não sai o socket da plataforma E 2011. Pelo que a Intel diz o 1155 terá melhor performance, mas não será considerada a plataforma entusiasta e não abdico do meu canal triplo de memória para o VMware nem por nada! :D Upgrades só no fim de 2011 para mim. 1 ano e meio ainda restantes. Acho que a plataforma 1366 teve bom tempo de vida (mais do que se esperava).
 
1366 é por um gulftown e ganha mais anos de vida. Vai sair gulftowns mais "baratos", fora a desvalorização que terá.
 
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Intel Sandy Bridge Quad-Core Processor Tested

At this year's Computex event, some of the most unexpected exhibits were socket LGA1155 motherboards based on Intel 6-series chipsets, across the board, from virtually every major motherboard vendor. Unexpected, because it's been less than an year since released mainstream derivatives of the Nehalem/Westmere architectures that use the LGA1156 socket. LGA1155 will form the base for performance, mainstream, and value segments of processors based on the upcoming Sandy Bridge architecture, which is a generation successor of Nehalem. With so many motherboard vendors showing off their creations in release-grade conditions, it is obvious that engineering samples of processors to go with them are already on the loose and will land in some enthusiast's hands. It did, in the skillful hands of Coolaler, who wasted no time in putting it through a quick run through popular benchmarks.

Coolaler tested an LGA1155 quad-core processor operating at 2.5 GHz, which CPU-Z can't name but marks it as a Sandy Bridge engineering sample. Among the little that's known about this processor, is that it has a base clock speed of 100 MHz (Nehalem/Westmere processors use BClk of 133 MHz), which means that to achieve 2.5 GHz, it uses a multiplier value of 25. It has all the instruction sets of Westmere including SSE 4.2 and AES acceleration, but also features AVX (Advanced Vector Extensions), a successor to SSE 4.2 which expands the processor's number crunching abilities, and increases performance per MHz. The cache structure up to the second level is the same (32 KB L1I, 32 KB L1D, 256 KB /core L2), but uses a smaller L3 cache at 6 MB (compared to 8 MB on Lynnfield). HyperThreading technology provides the OS with 8 logical CPUs to deal with.



The setup was aided with 4 GB of DDR3 memory and ATI Radeon HD 5800 series graphics. The processor crunched Super Pi 1M in 16.349 s, it scored 371 points in CPU Mark. In the multi-threaded Cinebench R11.5 benchmark, the 2.5 GHz chip scored a little under Core i7 860 (reference score). In the Everest CPU Queen, it's about as fast a Core i5 750 from what we could say, but in the Photoworxx test, it outperformed the Core i7 965 XE. In a separate set of tests run on the same hardware albeit in Windows XP, the processor was eight times faster than any other processor in the AES test (because of its native AES extensions), and edged the Core i7 965 XE in memory bandwidth despite having a narrower dual-channel DDR3 IMC.



While the results don't show a revolutionary processor, it is intended to be one. Right now it's eligible for the benefit of doubt. The real benefits will be for those models which come with embedded graphics, since the IGP and memory controller will be present on the same die, instead of the present design where the package is an MCM for two dies: CPU and northbridge. When Sandy Bridge releases is a subject of immense speculation. Since motherboard makers unveiled such mature designs of LGA1155 motherboards as early as in June 2010, a market release of the platform may not be too far away.

In TechPowerUp

 
Última edição pelo moderador:
Pelo que li ai em cima, sendo eu um feliz possuidor de um i7 860, esses novos CPU, irão render onde houver graficas integradas...ainda é cedo claro, apesar de ser uma evolução, não será mesmo (como dizem) uma revolução a que leve as pessoas a mudarem.
 
Ainda é muito cedo para pensarem se vale a pena ou não. Aquilo é um ES e reparem que opera apenas a 2,5 Ghz e um BCLK de apenas 100 mhz. Se fosse 133 mhz seria 3,33 ghz.

Não tou a ver estes CPU's virem ca fora com frequências baixas ;)
 
Intel to Ramp Up Sandy Bridge Aggressively on Desktop Market

Intel Corp.’s ongoing transition to 32nm manufacturing process and Nehalem/Westmere micro-architecture products can be called pretty aggressive as the company is offering its latest chips targeting different price ranges and performance levels. However, sources close to Intel claim that the transition to Sandy Bridge chips on the desktop market will be even more rapid
As is known, Intel intends to start revenue shipments of microprocessors based on the Sandy Bridge architecture in the fourth quarter of the year. In order to prepare for the launch, which is scheduled on the first quarter of 2011, the world’s largest chipmaker will ship hundreds of thousands desktop processors powered by the new micro-architecture, which will represent around 3% of all desktop chips the company plans to ship in Q4 2010.
Already in Q1 2011, Intel plans to rather substantially increase the share of its Sandy Bridge chips among desktop processors to around 12% - 13% (~6% - Core i7, ~5% - Core i5, ~2% - Core i3). In Q2 2011 the share of Sandy-Bridge-based processors will be even greater since Intel intends to release Pentium processors powered by the new micro-architecture for entry-level markets and they usually require high volumes.
The first Intel Sandy Bridge chips will feature two or four cores with Turbo Boost and Hyper-Threading technology as well as integrated graphics processor that will actually be on the same die as the x86 cores, according to previous reports. The chips will address mainstream market segments currently served by Intel Core i7, Core i5 and Core i3 processors, hence, there will be a lot of different models with 65W (dual-core, quad-core)or 95W (quad-core) thermal design power. The new processors will use LGA1155 form-factor and will be compatible with platforms based on the Intel 6-series chipsets code-named Cougar Point. It is noteworthy that while the new 6-series mainstream chipsets support Serial ATA-600 and some other innovations, the USB 3.0 does not seem to be a capability of the core-logic. Some Intel-series chipsets will also not support PCI.
The key feature of Sandy Bridge Intel AVX (Advanced Vector Extensions) which, when used by software programmers, will increase performance in floating point, media, and processor intensive software, according to the Intel. Key features of Intel AVX include wider vectors, increasing from 128 bit to 256 bit wide, resulting in up to 2x peak FLOPs output; enhanced data rearrangement, resulting in allowing data to be pulled more efficiently, and three operand, non-destructive syntax for a range of benefits. Intel AVX can also increase energy efficiency beyond the increases brought by the micro-architectural innovations, and is backwards compatible to existing Intel processors.

Ou a Intel tem medo da AMD, ou está muito confiante nesta nova arquitectura... Basicamente no Q1/2011 teremos Sandy Bridge com fartura para venda...
 
E sem capacidade para USB 3?... estou mais "ansioso" pelo i7 970 de 6 cores a preço decente, do que por esse socket 1155 para ser franco.

Sem USB3 de propósito... A Intel quer usar o Light Peak como novo standard universal, deixa de haver firewire, e usb... A Intel atrasa a implementação em larga escala do USB3.0, só para usar a tecnologia deles.

Esse i7 970 vai ser cpu para encher chouriços... :D Vais ver...
 
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