Page 7 of the pdf file posted by Mats says that Gulftown will run on their X58 series chipset. So I presume the platforms are compatible.
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Boards with 975X chipset were not compatible with Conroe despite Conroe being perfectly compatible with the 975X chipset. So that doesn't really mean anything... it is possible that Intel could pull another one of its games and 32nm CPUs will work only on "updated" X58 boards.
A laptop SO-DIMM RAM slot or something like that, I guess.
Here's the original source:
http://www.intel.com/pressroom/kits/...n_32nmWestmere
I think it looks too small for that, but IDK.
is there a 32nm shrink of penryn core2 arch, or any other 32nm dual core... or is everything from here on nehalem / IGP based?
Gulftown = 6 cores and 12 threads! :ROTF: I love it. Man, that thing might need to go into my rig. I need a Gulftown. :yepp:
LGA 1366 and LGA 1156 will continue. 45nm 4C/8T i5 owners will go down to 2C/4T 32nm. But LGA1366 owners will get cheaper chips with 32nm.
So still 2 sockets.
Its Intel TurboBoost. (Flash cache for HDs). And its a laptop thing. Its also known as Robson. Old tech so to say.
http://img.tomshardware.com/us/2007/...robson_425.jpg
Only Nehalem. Or rather actual Westmere. Core 2 stops at 45nm like i5.
Yes. But you can say 45nm 4C/8T LGA1156 will first be replaced by 32nm 2C/4T with IGP. Then later with 32nm Sandy bridge.
No, not Mini PCIe.
This: http://www.intel.com/design/flash/na...mory/index.htm
Sorry to be off topic, but did anyone see that guys eye brows? x_x
Quote from the PDF in your link:It's the same PCB format as the mobile WLAN cards have, they both follow the PCIe mini standard.Quote:
Designed for easy integration into systems, the PCIe* full-minicard and
half-mini interface card are available in 2 GB and 4 GB capacities.
Turbo:http://www.dustinhome.dk/pd_5010113924.aspx
WLAN:http://www.dustinhome.dk/pd_5010204754.aspx
http://eetimes.eu/semi/213402791
an other video ...
i hope this is bs, i want a 45nm i5 duallie, then a 32nm i5 quad, not the other way round!
Well that's encouraging progress, gulftown sounds neat! I'm slowly starting to hunger for more cores.
yup, drop in compatible
what he said, next version of intel's turbo boost memory.
Nope, the uArch that makes up the Nehalem core is replacing it.
Sandy Bridge (formerly Gesher) is the new uArch that will be replacing Nehalem. So it's really the upgrade for the whole line.
Yup, and don't count out seeing a 32nm refresh of Lynnfield on LGA1156. This was probably going to be coming out 2010 after Westmere comes out Q4 2009 (same timeline as Lynnfield/Nehalem). Might be 4 core or 6 core (probably 4).