ich gebe RonnyD schon recht ,zumindest weil die jetzigen systeme schnell genug sind,aber es ist bei mir der zwang nach was anderen ,deswegen hatte ich schon ein kurzen ausflug nach amd
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hihiDurch Early Adopters werden Teile der Entwicklungskosten relativ schnell wieder eingespielt.
nVIDIA SLI (nur x8/x8)
wird das bei allen Board´s mit X58 so sein ?
anscheinend ohne NV200 Chip schon.
will nVidia wohl künstlich limitieren damit die (teureren) Boards mit dem Chip einen Vorteil haben.
finde ich sehr schade von nVidia, bei einem Highend Board sollten solche künstlichen Limitierungen nun wirklich nicht sein, AMD hats ja auch nicht nötig.
Hi,
denkt doch mal an SLI-Way wie sollte das den laufen 8-8-4 oder sogar 2....
Also wartet doch erstmal ab.
Gruß Raberduck
Das sind aber ganz schön teuere Preise allein für ein Mainboard.
400 Euro für ein Asus Rampage? Lohnt sich kein Meter meiner Meinung nach jetzt schon umzusteigen
der pries ist mir nicht so wichtig.
Ghigo schrieb:Hmm italy online retailer give now on stock for 18/11 , confirmed retail price too, taking orders
(P.N.: BX80601920)
CORE i7 920 2.66Ghz 1333 8MB LGA1366 BOXED € 259,00 +vat
INTEL (P.N.: BX80601940)
CORE i7 940 2.93 1600 8MB LGA1366 BOXED € 489,00 +vat
INTEL (P.N.: BX80601965)
CORE i7 EXTREME 965 3.2Ghz 1600 8MB LGA1366 BOXED € 879,00 +vat
(Quelle: Bit-Tech.net)There’s one thing I have to give ECS credit for – its PR and marketing tries hard. While its products are sometimes less than fantastic at least its new X58 motherboard has come a long way from what they once were and the design below actually looks pretty neat: sort of, flamey.
Although, on second thoughts, maybe the association with fire is not a good one.
Anyway, ECS was keen to tell bit-tech that its Black Edition products are of higher quality than before, while not targeting the very high-end, ECS will try to appeal to the more value concious "middle-high level". At just US$260 the ECS X58B-A Black Edition should certainly appeal to more cost concious upgraders.
The board has a simple design – six phase power regulation and just one phase for north bridge and another for all six memory slots. ECS claims support for an impressive DDR3-1600 XMP, although we’ll have to see for ourselves if this works. ECS does include solid aluminium capacitors and environmentally sealed chokes, but the MOSFETs are old school and there’s no attempt for fancy power regulation like other companies are now using.
There are two Realtek Gigabit Ethernet chipsets that include the usual teaming function, as well as Realtek ALC888S High-Definition sound. The JMicron JMB362 chipset offers a couple of eSATA ports, but there is only the base level six SATA included.
There’s simple onboard power and reset buttons and clear CMOS button on the rear I/O, in addition to a two digit POST LED readout, a pair of PCI-Express 2.0 x16 slots, one x4 slot, two x1 slots and one PCI. The board is also both SLI and CrossFire multi-GPU certified as well.
It’s a decent mix but feels a little “check box.” In some ways, having simple features that work will certainly suit those looking for an uncomplicated purchase – after all, simple momentary buttons can be depressed just as well as fancy backlit ones, and its QoolTech II (Qool? yea, I died a little inside also) should work to cool the chipsets sufficiently, while remaining silent. What about six phase power regulation versus 12-16? Well, ECS still conforms to Intel’s latest VRD 11.1 spec so it should work just fine, but there might not be much overhead though.
Not everyone wants an expensive, super-OC motherboard with tons of features that they'll probably never use, and ECS is not one rated to build the best BIOSes in the world so we agree: why waste money adding extra hardware if the software isn't up to taking advantage? In a market where X58 board prices could likely be spiralling out of control, the X58A-B might possibly be worth a second look, and we always retain a cautious optimism about new products - after all, recently companies like Biostar have proven an extreme overclocker favourite. When it comes to pushing the boundaries though, the “Black” series has a long way to go before it’s anywhere near enthusiast
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