Stereodude
Not really a
And that's a problem why? What program as you using that can take advantage of all that RAM?I don't see that any of the boards handle 64GB. Apparently that Hasbro CPU is limited to 32GB for some reason. uke-r:
And that's a problem why? What program as you using that can take advantage of all that RAM?I don't see that any of the boards handle 64GB. Apparently that Hasbro CPU is limited to 32GB for some reason. uke-r:
It was my understanding that Haswell non-K versions are not overclockable at all and the K-Versions, while overclockable have transactional memory (TSX) and I/O virtualization (VT-d) features removed.
It is like the old P4 days where you could get P4's at the same clock speed with different features (x64 versions; X32 only versions, and with or without virtualization support (VT-x)).
Do I need those fancy transvagional and virtual features for PS and Capture One?
Uh... Good luck with that. If you want to overclock you buy a K chip.It isn't an unlocked chip.
Only if running Xen, VMWare, VirtualBox, QEMU or DOSBOX...Do I need those fancy transvagional and virtual features for PS and Capture One?
Prior non K CPUs of Sandy Bridge / Ivy Bridge allowed you to change the multiplier up to 4 steps higher. That means you could take a 3.0gHz chip to 3.4gHz. With Haswell, Intel got rid of that.Bummer. Can you at least force all the cores to the Turbo boot speed?
I'm sure Merc will be along shortly to comment on this.Do I need those fancy transvagional and virtual features for PS and Capture One?
Prior non K CPUs of Sandy Bridge / Ivy Bridge allowed you to change the multiplier up to 4 steps higher. That means you could take a 3.0gHz chip to 3.4gHz. With Haswell, Intel got rid of that.
Why not? It wasn't very useful on Sandy Bridge or Ivy Bridge....but I didn't expect the bclk to be useless as well.
You don't get a 3.9gHz with all the cores loaded you get 3.7gHz.It looks like the cost of the special K version is about +10%, so that is about right if the OC is 4.2GHz compared to 3.9GHz turbo.
Not being able to OC is not the end of the world. It just means you get what you paid for with no extra's.
Strangle the bean counters instead. The engineers I'm sure want the best thermal interface. It's the accountants who tell them otherwise. I can't say how many otherwise great products have been ruined by planned obsolescence and/or intentionally designing in failure points, all in the name of increasing profits.They better not do the same trick on their server chips. Those I'll buy for the server farm upgrade in about three weeks will cost ~3000$ each. If one fails just after its warranty expires and I find out those mofo put a cheap thermal interface into it, I'll drive to their head quarter and I'll strangle a bunch of engineers with my bare hands.
Storage porn. I've found people online who were able to install Win10 on a RAID0 of these beasts.