illidan
PCAXE Addicted
- Učlanjen(a)
- 01.04.2009.
- Poruka
- 7.079
- Rezultat reagovanja
- 3.765
Moja konfiguracija
CPU & cooler:
amd 5800x3d, ek nucleus cr240 dark, phanteks t30
Motherboard:
asus rog strix b550-i gaming
RAM:
g.skill trident z neo 32gb
VGA & cooler:
nvidia rtx 4070super founders edition
Display:
asus vg27aql1a
HDD:
samsung 980 pro 1tb, wd black sn770 2tb
Sound:
ifi zen dac v2, presonus eris 3.5, akg k712 pro balanced
Case:
lian li a4 h20
PSU:
corsair sf750 platinum
Mice & keyboard:
lamzu atlantis mini, kbd.fans tofu65 e-white
Internet:
optical cable
Intel on Tuesday brought out the Sandy Bridge-based version of its highest-performing Xeons. The Xeon E7 series is the practical version of the Westmere-EX architecture and is intended for both servers as well as other very high performance computers. It represents one of the few if not first Intel chips to break the eight-core barrier and, at 10 real cores, can handle as many as 20 simultaneous code threads at once through Hyperthreading.
All of the chips are based on a 32 nanometer manufacturing process and are both faster, as much as 40 percent versus the Xeon 7500 it replaces, as well as more power efficient. They can now entirely shut down parts of the chip not being used and save energy when the processor only has a light load. Parallelism is a focus and will see higher-end E7s work in systems with as many as 256 sockets, potentially leading to thousands of cores in a supercomputer-class PC.
At the top of the line, Intel is promising 10 versions of the 10-core chip that range from a 2.13GHz, relatively low-power 105W chip up to an ultimate 2.4GHz chip at 130W of power. Also on tap is an eight-core, 2.67GHz version at 130W for those who don't need as much ongoing at once.
An entry-level Xeon E3 series is also shipping that provides dual- and quad-core chips for companies that only need a light amount of work but who still want error-correcting memory and other features that don't exist in a regular
Systems are either being unveiled or shipping today from major companies like Dell, HP, Lenovo, and SGI. Prices for the E7 line ranges from $774 to $4,616 in bulk, where the E3 floats in a more mainstream $189 to $612 depending on the speed.
Izvor: Electronista.com, TechSpot.com
All of the chips are based on a 32 nanometer manufacturing process and are both faster, as much as 40 percent versus the Xeon 7500 it replaces, as well as more power efficient. They can now entirely shut down parts of the chip not being used and save energy when the processor only has a light load. Parallelism is a focus and will see higher-end E7s work in systems with as many as 256 sockets, potentially leading to thousands of cores in a supercomputer-class PC.
At the top of the line, Intel is promising 10 versions of the 10-core chip that range from a 2.13GHz, relatively low-power 105W chip up to an ultimate 2.4GHz chip at 130W of power. Also on tap is an eight-core, 2.67GHz version at 130W for those who don't need as much ongoing at once.
An entry-level Xeon E3 series is also shipping that provides dual- and quad-core chips for companies that only need a light amount of work but who still want error-correcting memory and other features that don't exist in a regular
Systems are either being unveiled or shipping today from major companies like Dell, HP, Lenovo, and SGI. Prices for the E7 line ranges from $774 to $4,616 in bulk, where the E3 floats in a more mainstream $189 to $612 depending on the speed.
Izvor: Electronista.com, TechSpot.com