some socket 2011 details

Bring on the 22nm Ivy's, they look so tiny
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Sandy Bridge E (extreme) are the enthusiast SB CPUs being released for the X79 chipset and I think they are going to be a 990x and 980x SB equivalent of the X58 versions, DDR4 is also going to be for X79. There has been talk about the Sandy Bridge E CPUs working on P67/Z68 mobos as well but obviously you won't get to use DDR4 only DDR3 with P67 or Z68 so they won't be as fast as on X79.

Ivy Bridge is the next step up from the Sandy Bridge E's which will be 22nm and said to be at least 20 odd % faster using less power and giving off less heat.
 
well i really think rumors of SBE working on p67 mb would be fake as the cpu is nearly 2ce the size ... those particular ivy bridge cpus are a 22nm revision of the current SB cpus...
 
Man, this is really confusing. Sandy bridge-e is socket 2011 32nm, right? And Ivy bridge is socket 1155 22nm? I've heard Sandy bridge-e should be the exact same as Ivy bridge (socket 2011, 22nm though). Wikipedia also states that but i know it cannot be trusted. I really need to do some research about this
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Ivy bridge is a mainstream 22nm cpu.This is something like the 2600k is today. I would not imagine you will see a bunch of cores on this (more then likely 4 or 6).Price point will be about the same as the 2600k. SBE is an enthusiast grade cpu. it will replace x58 . This will be 8 -12 cores. the FIRST set on this plat form will be 32 nm. This should be released q3-q4 this year. The 22nm version of socket 2011, will be released in the first half of next year. Think tick tock. tick being New platform Ie socket 1155 or 2011, tock being a die shrink. So ivy bridge is basically Tock on the 1155, and SBE is a Tick on socket 2011. This is what most of my research says to me. I hope this helps.
 
Ivy bridge is a mainstream 22nm cpu.This is something like the 2600k is today. I would not imagine you will see a bunch of cores on this (more then likely 4 or 6).Price point will be about the same as the 2600k. SBE is an enthusiast grade cpu. it will replace x58 . This will be 8 -12 cores. the FIRST set on this plat form will be 32 nm. This should be released q3-q4 this year. The 22nm version of socket 2011, will be released in the first half of next year. Think tick tock. tick being New platform Ie socket 1155 or 2011, tock being a die shrink. So ivy bridge is basically Tock on the 1155, and SBE is a Tick on socket 2011. This is what most of my research says to me. I hope this helps.

Thanks. That helped. AMD is much more simplistic.
 
IVY BRIDGE will work on P67/H67/Z68, ie backwards compatible with the LGA1155 socket.

The Sandy Bridge E chips are not going to work on any LGA1155 socket board, they are different beasts all together, more similar to the X58 chips, and indeed that is the chipset which X79 shall replace.
 
The way I've always expected it to go it that there will be Sandy Bridge E on LGA2011, then Ivy Bridge on LGA1155, then Ivy Bridge E, again on 2011. Although quite where that puts it in relation to SBE being delayed, I'm not sure, as I thought IB/IBE would launch pretty much at the same time.
 
Noo, in the same way as you have Dual Channel or Triple Channel DDR3, you can have Quad Channel DDR3 too.
 
Wich is the same as DDR4?
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Completely no. XD AMD currently only dual channel but supports DDR3, just DDR3 in Dual Channel.

With Bulldozer, AMD CPUs are expected to finally work with Tri Channel DDR3, but now Intel are launching their future CPUs with Quad Channel DDR3 - AMD once again will probably stick with the one behind Intel for ages haha.
 
[font=arial, verdana, tahoma, sans-serif]Cool. Quad-channel DDR3, 8-cores + HT. What do you think this will do to AMD? I think it's pretty close to BD's release. Do you guys think AMD will be in Intel's shadow again?[/font]
 
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