While I have owned a couple of their systems along the way. My first I think was a 133MHz and the last was an Athlon XP 1600 (I am not sure what I did with this system it may be in a closet somewhere).
Answers to your questions
1) I will be working with the Channel program (resellers). I did work with this group before I came on here.
2) I don't know. I am not part of that decision.
And thanks all the rest of you.
Well they say that all good things must come to an end and today I am sad to announce that my time as the Official representative to Enthusiast Space for Intel® is coming to an end. At the end of April I will be moving on to other opportunities within Intel. Since I am not into long good-byes...
Dang I am going to have to pass that up. I can just see it now, "We are happy to has announced the start of shipping of the Intel® Core i9 processors." (Not!)
I just built a new system to replace my old Intel® Core™ i7-860 home system. I built this system with an Intel Core i7-3770K, EVGA GTX 660ti, Intel SSD 335 240GB, a new secondary touch screen monitor and Windows 8. While I am very happy with everything else on the build I am not a big fan...
Outside of the office applications that do here I am also playing some heavy games and haved with some digital encoding work. Am I using all the the performance I have at my figures? No but there are times that I could use a little more power.
Wow comparing my old Intel® Pentium® 75MHz processor vs. my new Intel Core™ i5-3570K isnt even close. I can do so much more with this system so much faster that isnt even close.
Here is the Intel® Desktop Board DH77EB and it has Display Port, DVI-I, and HDMI.
As Dave said the difference is really the ability to overclock between the H77 and the Z77 other than that it is more about target market that the board is designed for. So you may have a hard time finding an...
Most of the time when have seen this it has ended up being a power supply issue. Try the screw driver to start it but after that see if you can barrrow someones PSU and try it with a replacement PSU.
I havent seen anything on the performance of our next generation of processors but it seems to strike me a bit odd that it is running at 2.6GHz at 83w. We have the Intel® Core™ i5-3330S running at base 2.7GHz before turbo at 65w. Also the voltage is almost 25% lower than our 3rd generation...
I thought we got enough complaints about changing our sockets already but if we were to intergate the NIC on to the processor we would have to change the socket again.
You mean that there are people out there who try to understand what IDC is saying? Most of the time when I see a post by him I just start bobbing my head up and down pretending to have a clue as to what he is talking about.
On another note try to read 1632 by Eric Flint.
While I haven't heard that this is the reason I would think that it might have something to do with the stress of plugging in the connection. I have seen a large number of laptops that have the power connection broken simply by picking it up in the front and putting pressure on the plug in in...
I really like the ultra low voltage processors but it is important to understand their limitations. The biggest thing is the performance that you will see when on battery is not going to be near the performance you see when it is plugged in due to the battery saving features.
I think it was around 15 years ago when my father told me that CPUs were not going to get much faster because they were getting to small that they almost to atoms in size. Since that time it seems that some way we have found to make processors faster and smaller.
Wow when I saw this it really threw me because I knew that we didnt make a P61 chipset. Historically we have used P for a performance designed chipset board. In many cases these P boards wont have any support for on board graphics.
The B75 chipset is desgned for a good general purpose/businss...
Outside of the price (if there is a difference between them); there is no reason to go with the Intel® Core™ i3-2120 over the Intel Core i3-3220. The 3rd generation Intel Core processors run about 6% faster at the same clock speed and they also use less power.
I just finished building myself a new home system with an Intel® Core™ i7-3770K; so unless something comes up I won't build a new system with our next generation of processors.
The only thing to check is the two little notches on the side of the processor and that they line up with the little piece in the socket that is to fit in them. If you have these lined up then there is going to be a good bit of force to close the socket.
For the 3rd generation Intel® Core™ processors the thermtrip is at 130°C, to shut it down at. This is 5° hotter than what the 2nd generation Intel Core processors were at. http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/processors/core/3rd-gen-core-desktop-vol-1-datasheet.html page 71
Since most of the new1366 boards are off the market now about the only way you can get one is from ebay or craigslist. The only problem is that he is not doing any returns on the boards and since they are out of the box it is very possible that someone has bent a pin in the socket or done...
This is a little different than what you state you are looking for but I think it will fit your needs very well.... The Intel® NUC BOXDC3217BY. These small unit computers in which you will simply add the RAM and a small SSD (mSATA drive) and away you go.
It looks to me like the listing for the Intel® Celeron® E1600 is mistaken on the number of transistors it lists. When comparing it with other dual core processors with the same micro-architecture it has the same TDP and features all turned on http://ark.intel.com/compare/27248,28024,34751 also...
On our site we have some stuff about that talks about how to straighten out a bent pin but to replae a broken pin in an LGA socket I would say that is something that is going to be impossible out of a board manufacturer.
Well mostly I am the above + gaming. At work I am working on an Intel® Core™ i5-3570K, at home I am using an Intel Core i7-3770K and my laptop has a Intel Core i5-2557M.
Bluecharm the processor may making a difference. If you are looking at some of the Intel® Celeron® and Intel Pentium® from the 3rd generation they should work without Bios update. Also understand that the Bios update for the 3rd generation Intel Core® processors was released in Jan. of 2012 so...
For the value I think it is hard to beat the Cooler Master Hyper 212 Evo. If you are looking even better cooling you can add an additional 120mm fan to it.
If you stay away from the ECC memory support you can use a number of boards like the Asus P8Z77-V. If you use the C206 or C216 based boards from Asus you can use these processors along with ECC memory
The Intel® Xeon® E3 processors do not have overclocking capabilities of processors like the Intel Core i5-3570K or the Intel Core i7-3770K. As far as BLCK overclocking that would be largely up to the board but from my understanding that is tougher on the server boards that support them them.
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