Hybrid NVIDIA Chipset Motherboards Launched 60
MojoKid writes "Filling the price gap between the high-end nForce 680i SLI and more affordable 650i SLI chipsets, without sacrificing any advanced features, motherboard manufacturer Asus has created a
hybrid motherboard chipset in cooperation with NVIDIA, dubbed the "Dual X16 SLI". Designed for
the Intel platform, the chipset combination employed on the P5N32-E SLI Plus
motherboard offers true, dual PCI Express x16 electrical connections for graphics, dual
Gig-E LAN support and a slew of other features found on high-end 680i boards. HotHardware pits the P5N32-E SLI Plus against an nForce 680i SLI to see if Asus' hybrid chipset approach truly offers all of the performance of the more expensive 680i SLI for a fraction of the cost."
Slow news day (Score:3, Insightful)
Manufacturer announces slightly different model of thing at lower price. How did this get in? Slow news day?
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If you were trying to be funny, well you missed your mark ^_^
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My only experince is with agp though, so again, that might have changed.
Re:Slow news day (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Slow news day (Score:5, Informative)
To be fair, this is a rather unexpected announcement. Usually new motherboards only come up when the chipset manufacturers release new chips. What Asus have done here is to use the existing chips in a way that they weren't originally designed for. And they've come up with a stunning offer: they're beating the price of the next cheapest motherboard on the market with the same feature set by nearly 50%. These things are available now for about £90+VAT; their closest competitor is £140+VAT. For a geek news site, I'd say that's a pretty important story.
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And the answer is? (Score:3, Insightful)
Even a simple, yes/no/sort of would have been more helpful than nothing.
TFA is interesting and all, but it should have a summary. Not a teaser!
Very simple marketing tactics. I would have expected better from slashdot.
(oh wait, nevermind, thats what I have come to expect from slashdot. silly me)
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Even a simple, yes/no/sort of would have been more helpful than nothing.
TFA is interesting and all, but it should have a summary. Not a teaser!
You'll find those in the Tagging beta, shortly!
Re:And the answer is? (Score:4, Funny)
As a worker at an OEM who has some input into buying decisions these sorts of things are handy to know, and also I am pretty sure you forgot the bit where this is only a geek blog
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I thought it was a nerd blog?
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I get about 5 CMP magazines in the mail each week. To me, an advertisement is the page that says "advertisement" on it, and a news article is an advertisement that is written in the style of an article. That's all that's in these trade mags anyway, it's all advertising.
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What is 'hybrid' about this? (Score:3, Insightful)
Just some more inane marketing speak.
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Re:What is 'hybrid' about this? (Score:5, Informative)
Its good for the environment. (Score:2)
Electrical connections (Score:1)
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Old! (Score:1)
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Right, but none of them have been posted to slashdot, so why do we care?
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To proudly go where no man has gone before! (Score:5, Funny)
Now that I call progress! Holy shit! Electrical?!?
None of that old fashioned, noisy, pneumatic video signalling for ASUS!
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Actually, they mean that they do have a full 16 lanes. Compare to the 650i, which is at a similar price point, which only supports 8 as you describe, but has a slot designed for 16.
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It better have 40 total lanes if they're trying to get close to 680i performance. 680i has 40 lanes total, two x16 SLI and one x8 intended for a physics card, but which can be used for anything. If the Dual x16 SLI doesn't even have 32 or 40 total lanes, it's not really in the same league. Surely it does, right? Or is that another dis
Re:What they mean is (Score:4, Informative)
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No reason to hack it when you can buy them [matrox.com].
Sure it would work, but how fast would it be?
PCIe 1x is adequately fast for many purposes. PCIe 1x bandwidth is 250MB/s (that's bytes, not bits), which is roughly the same as AGP 1x, and twice as fast as PCI. Both of these technologies are adequate for providing standard 2D desktop graphics. I wouldn't want to try playing hi-def video over a PCIe 1x link (1920x1080p @ 32-bit, 30 fps
since when? (Score:1, Informative)
Mind you, I mean *so blatantly*. They used to have a bit more discretion.
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I've got used to people not reading the summary now, so presumably everyone's going to start not even reading the title...?
No thanks (Score:2)
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We're talking about motherboard chipsets here, not graphics cards, and you can't just go purchase an nvidia chipset seperately to tack on your VIA board...
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P5N-SLI (Score:1)
More SLI (Score:2)
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MPG? (Score:1)
NVIDIA BLOWS (Score:1)
This is not trolling, it is a fact. Compare to intel, VIA, and others supporting way older hardware.
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Ummmm, ok. Its called progress, either keep up or get left behind.
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