ddrueding
Fixture
I've had this i7 940 for a while now. Where is the next speed bump/price drop? I'm in a position to sell my current rig and upgrade, but there is nothing to upgrade to? It's been 6 months...
May I suggest me? :rofl:Spend you money on something else. May I suggest wine?
Word has it Intel will be announcing its eight-core Nehalem-EX Xeon processor next week, on May 26th.
http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/1137401/intel-core-nehalem-ex
Alright. Where is the multi-socket i7
Kidding, of course. Too many of my tasks are still single-threaded.
One wrinkle to the multiplier is the new Turbo Mode. This mode essentially automatically overclocks a single core of the CPU under certain loads. If you have overclocked a Core i7-920 to 3.66GHz and then you switch on Turbo Mode, the CPU will actually run at 4.03GHz in single-threaded apps. Is it worth it? Frankly, we’re not sure. We are getting to the point where it’s pretty rare to be running performance-intensive single-threaded applications, so the performance boost will be minimal. You do get a 1x multiplier boost in dual-threaded apps so you most games would run at 3.83GHz. Sounds good right?
...
Unfortunately you can’t set your individual Turbo Mode settings on the cheap chips. Intel limits fine-grain Turbo Mode control to the Core i7-965 Extreme Edition. The pedestrian Core i7-920 and Core i7-940 are limited to a single multiplier increase for single-threaded apps, which is of marginal usefulness. It’s also clear that not all motherboard vendors think Turbo Mode is worthwhile. We’ve tested two different Asus boards that don’t implement Turbo Mode the same way Intel does. Instead of letting the user set the individual Turbo Mode settings on an Extreme Edition chip, your only option is to overclock all cores simultaneously.
Turbo Mode is something that should be evaluated based on your needs and the specifics of your overclock. For example, our case study actually found that a moderate overclock with Turbo Mode gave us better benchmark results than a higher-speed overclock without Turbo Mode.
Why didn't you build something on top of that motherboard? Add two X5500 series Xeon and you would have had eight i7 cores at your service for not much more money than what you've spent already. This board accepts unbufferred memory up to 24GB, so RAM wouldn't have been a problem.
This chip is based on the old Core 2 Quad architecture, not the new i7 one. It will yield significantly to a similarly-priced Xeon X55xx chip.The 5420 looks like a great deal.
But the Z8NA-D6 cannot accomodate three high-end PCI-E graphic cards.