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Intel® X38 Express Chipset

Posted by Bob Duffy Oct 22, 2007

The buzz has started on the Intel's X38 Express chipset, making use of the next-gen PCI Express 2.0 connectivity.

 

 

Geoff Gasior from The Tech Report takes a look at how the X38 chipset stacks up.

"...the X38 takes a major step beyond the P35 with its 32 PCI Express 2.0 lanes, which make the X38 the first chipset to offer second-generation PCI Express, ensuring plenty of bandwidth for future graphics cards. The X38's full 32 lanes also make it the first Intel chipset capable of supporting dual-x16 CrossFire configurations.

The X38 has other perks, too, such as support for DDR3 speeds up to 1333MHz. DDR3 memory modules have quickly scaled to 1333MHz and beyond, making support for faster memory an attractive feature. However, DDR3 still carries a hefty premium, and we suspect most enthusiasts will prefer to stick with DDR2-based X38 implementations for now. "

 

Tech Report puts together an impressive report running a number of test on the first X38 boards from Asus (Asus P5E3 Deluxe WiFi-AP @n) and Gigabyte(Gigabyte GA-X38-DQ6). Check out the full report and let us know what you think.

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Tune in 6:30 Monday 10/22/07

 

Chat live

 

The Social Media Club of Silicon Valley will be at Intel Headquarters on Monday October 22 from 6:00 to 8:30 p.m. I will be one a many cool cats discussing Social Media and the Enterprise. If you can't attend watch the live webcast here.

 

The panel will be led by Shel Israel, co-author of “how blogs are changing the way businesses talk with customers” book with Robert Scoble.

 

Panel members will include:

 

 

Also on hand will Bay Area NBC affiliate KNTV-TV, some smart folks from Bay Area NBC affiliate KNTV-TV, and some familiar voices from this web site (Open Port), on hand to do a bit of show and tell.

 

Register to attend the event here and add it to your Upcoming events listing here.

 

If you can make it in person come back to this post to watch and post your questions live.

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Do you love an application and want to share it with the world? Well then go to Cool Software and give it... well a "Digg" to borrow a term from another site.

 

Cool software, from the ISN guys, allows the online community to post information about software applications they think are awesome. The more people who vote for an application, the cooler the application is. What a great idea... wish I thought of it!

 

 

For the week so far the top vote go to

 

  • GoogleEarth 32 votes (Got to agree, pretty neat, I used GoogleEarth to virtually remodel my Family Room)

  • deliGoo 20 votes (Delicious Search Engine)

  • We+ 19 votes (social media platform)

 

So if you're a Visio nut, love your NeoPets screensaver or are simply addicted to vampire biting friends on Facebook, head over to coolsw.intel.com to make it cool. Hmmm maybe they can add an uncool feature?

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Sneak peak at Skulltrail system using two 45nm Quad Core Xeon processors (Harpertown) running at 4GHz.

 

From Channel Intel.

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First let me say I'm not on the inside track with Moorestown. I'm an outside observer with my own perspective on this product, but I have to say... I think this will be HUGE. Lot's of talk about the Moorestown platform at IDF this year and I've heard many refer to this as the iPhone killer, or next generation iPhone. The game changer is size, the processing power, and WiMax capabilities. This is much more than anything in the market now. It can be almost anything you want it to be, and what you want it to do might be more about what devices it talks to. Here's my personal speculation on potential uses for Moorestown.

 

Harmony Remote Killer: This one is easy. Unlike the iphone with this kind of device you should be able to add and download applications and be configure to do pretty much what you want it to do. It's the size of a remote. It has bluetooth and WiMax. It should be able to talk to all of your AV stuff and replace your most advanced universal remotes.

 

GameBoy/PSP Killer: This be will run on Intel’s next generation 45nm chips. It should far exceed anything any hand held game system can do today. You could host games on the fly with people near you or host over the Internet. I actually believe this could be an XBox Killer. It will have the horsepower, it will be ultimately connected. It just needs peripherals like a dock or wireless connectivity to a large display and keyboard. Drop it on your coffee table, turn on your wall mounted LCD, pick up a wireless controller and you are gaming.

 

Desktop Killer: Yes, a desktop killer. Again it should have the horsepower. It will have highspeed connections and a full blown browser. More and more apps are moving to the web. There's a lot of talk about the death of the application, as applications can be run in the browser. Drop it on your desk, have it detect and synch with your wireless keyboard, mouse and monitor and you are working. Also more IT shops are starting to see the value of OS and application streaming technology where you can pull down the apps you need when you need them. Edit a spreadsheet, crop a photo, do a CAD Design, all apps come from the network when you need them, wherever you are.

 

Storage may only an issue for the few things you need locally. With WiMax, songs, videos, applications could all be available at your finger tips whether you have them stored on your PC, DVR, or from a service provider. You could ultimately have any data or any application on a powerful mobile device on your hip, in your pocket or in your purse.

 

My perspective is Moorestown is shaping up to be the ubiquitous everything device. I discussed this idea 2 years ago with an Intel engineer, during a school fundraiser. I claimed if Intel could create the device the size of cell phone with the processing power of a PC, you would not need any other device other than peripherals. I was new, I was in marketing and he thought I was nuts. And he pretty much told me so, citing that he didn't see how Intel would profit from it. A couple of weeks later I saw him again and he was anxious to tell me he just saw a presentation that discussed exactly what I was talking about. I'd like to think this is Moorestown... and personally I can't wait!!

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