I may be mis-remembering my processor form factor history.. but here goes. I put together my existing PC about 18 months ago. At the time the Intel 1156 processor form factor was the new hotness..
The P7 denotes that this board is a LGA-1156 socket board, Asus use P6 for LGA-1366, while the P55 refers to the new Intel P55 Express chipset that this board features. As for Evo; this is a new range ...
I am not sure how to comment about this one, but it does seem to fall into the rather foolish category. News of the i5 CPU has been out for some time and we all have heard rumors about the boards and ...
Groomed for 1-mm pitch, 1,156-pin BGA devices, the SG-BGA-6230 socket accommodates a 35 mm x 35 mm package size and operates at bandwidths up to 8 GHz with less than 1 dB of insertion loss. The socket ...
So the new processors came out this week, and with them, a new chipset (H55) that can shovel the on-package video out to the appropriate ports. <BR><BR>Just to be confusing, they use the same LGA-1156 ...
Arctic coolling has announced the new Alpine 11 series which is an Ultra Quiet Coolers for Intel's upcoming Socket 1155/1156. The Intel Core i5 for socket 1156 is expected to be released somewhere in ...
The Intel Core architecture is one that has not always been a performance leader. The original Core CPUs were decent, but not that great. Starting with the Conroe based Core 2, things changed. We saw ...
The Cebit 2009 is just around the corner and already a few interesting infos are being leaked. Like the following picture of the LGA 1156 socket for the upcoming Core i5 from Intel: This one is of a ...
Today, ASUS introduced the P7P55D Series motherboards featuring the Intel P55 Express chipset and support for the latest LGA 1156 socket for Intel Core i7 and Core i5 processors. The motherboards come ...
Today, ASUS introduced the P7P55D Series motherboards featuring the Intel P55 Express chipset and support for the latest LGA 1156 socket for Intel Core i7 and Core i5 processors. The motherboards come ...
Computers have used socketed processors for most of the PC’s lifespan, with a few notable exceptions like Intel’s cartridge-based Pentium II and III aside. These sockets change every few processor ...
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