Intel's New Pentium 4 Chipsets Reviewed
RainDog writes "Intel has released its 845PE and GE chipsets for the Pentium 4 processor, and reviews are hitting the web. The new chipsets officially support DDR333, but are stuck with AGP 4X and ATA/100 support. What's most interesting about these new chipsets is that they're faster than VIA and SiS' latest Pentium 4 offerings, both of which support faster AGP 8X and ATA/133 graphics and disk interfaces. As if that weren't enough, Intel's new "Blue Mountain" motherboard comes on a black PCB with all sorts of multimedia ports and memory timing options. Not bad for the traditionally conservative Intel."
Again, the most prominent, first-mentioned, feature of the Intel reference motherboard is its... Black Color.
Wow. I eagerly await a candy-striped peppermint-flavored board, which surely will give better performance and more bang for the buck.
The reviewer loses all credibility with comments like
(OK, I admit it: I made up the part about the Firewire ports. But you get the idea.)
all the way in the next paragraph after including Firewire was a feature.
Also is this a review or an advertisment?
I'd moderate you (-1, Misguided)
YEARS?! I'll bet you a beer that this motherboard is usable *now* in Linux, or will be with the next 2.4 release (which come out reasonably quickly, say every month or so). What do you think it has that you cant use under Linux today, with the latest 2.4 kernel?
siri
845PE, GE, DDR333, AGP 8X, ATA/133, "Blue Mountain", black PCB (finally, someone for black kids to look up to...).
Can someone cut through this heap of jargon and marketroid buzzwordsmithy and tell me how in the name of RMS this affects me, the Linux power user? Does it bother anyone that in three months we'll be reading an identical story about 928BE, TL, MOK444, LBJ 9X, PCP/420, "Grassy Knoll", and yellow LSD? When does it end, and why do we care?
Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
http://anandtech.com/mb/showdoc.html
"I drank what?" - Socrates
You do not equate to we.
We are not all linux power users. Some are windows users, some are solaris users, some are casual linux users. Thats what makes the world great. Diversity.
This is news for nerds, stuff that matters. Not all nerds are the same. Stuff that matters to me may not matter to you, stuff that matters to you may not matter to me.
If you don't like it don't read the articles you don't want to. Please don't whine about them. Plenty of articles that will appeal to you will come.
I mod down any one who says "I'm sure I will get modded down for this"
... or don't we see chipset manufacturers avoiding the hard problems completely? I realize that cost is an issue, but for the most part, we're talking about high-performance workstation and server boards, which cost $500+ or more.
The biggest issues these days are:
Unfortunately, there seems to be little innovation going on in chipsets these days. The high end looks very, very, very depressingly identical to the cheap consumer crap. WTF folks?
-Erik
There are always four sides to every story: your side, their side, the truth, and what really happened.
When the first thing a motherboard review cites is how great it looks, you know we've finally crossed the threshold where extra speed is irrelevent. It's time to back off investment in hardware and put that money into developers. The computers are fast enough; now we need software that is more stable, more secure, and most usable.
// I will show you fear in a handful of jellybeans.
"...but are stuck with AGP 4X and ATA/100 support." Stuck with? AGP 8x and ATA/133 are very marginal improvements in most situations. Stuck with would have been having AGP 8x, ATA/133, and DDR266.
XeoMage
Intel is playing catch up and releasing some new boards with all the bells and whistles that the other guys have been releasing for some time now.
However, Intel does release stable products(some have been flawed, i820) And in an enteprise a board with an an Intel chipset is usually the best way to go.
But in the end who cares? As long as it works fine. As long as it is pretty quick, stable, and does as promised I am a pretty happy camper.
Got other stuff to worry about than p4's with 333 ddr. DDR aint to cheap anyway. I got a gig of it in my athlon box. But I coulda got 4 gigs of SDR ram for the same cost and tricked out a mean little server with it.
Jeez this aint news.
The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
If you are talking about the motherboard, it runs on a widely available chipset. Support the chipset, support every board that implements it. I would rather wait on purchasing hardware until linux drivers are available (cheaper that way), than use Microsoft's mediocre products.
BTW I am not running a PII 400MHz, I am running an Athlon 2100 on a KT333 chipset, and a nVidia GForce4 Ti.
I want my rights back. I was actually using them when our government stole them after 9/11.
If it doesn't have Serial ATA on the board, it isn't a new product. I can't be the only one holding off on their next major upgrade until they can get Serial ATA on a motherboard with an Intel chipset.
So come on Intel, put Serial ATA on the board and you've got a sure sale. No more of this parallel ATA crap. While you're at it, get rid of the serial and parallel ports.
Anandtech has a very good review at http://www.anandtech.com/mb/showdoc.html?i=1723. It compares and contrasts many motherboards with the chipsets on them, comparing features, etc, and it also has some very good benchmarking information. It also supports hyperthreading, which looks like it will be a very promising technology. It also points out some problems with some of these new motherboards. This chipset looks like it can offer great potential, for both the average home user, and the typical overclocker, especially the Albatron PX845PEV Pro, which has a interface that is similar to Softmenu 3. The ASUS P4PE also has great potential for overclocking, yet it doesnt look like it's as tough as the Albatron. Their technical support is also not as good. If it is USB that you are looking for though, the Gigabyte 8PE667 Ultra definately offers the most functionality (10 Ports, wow!). In all, this review is quite long, with 25 pages of content, which offers more information than the mentioned review.
I don't see any indication from the article whether the Intel motherboard that uses the i845ge also provides Serial ATA. Also, I would be interested in knowing how this Silicon Image chip is attached. For example, if it is only connected by a 32-bit 33MHz PCI bus, then it will only be able to transfer data across the bus at 133 megabytes per second. No single disk drive goes that fast, but if it has a bunch of Serial ATA ports, it might be an issue. I saw some posting on slashdot that said that most recent chipsets do not physically attach their IDE interfaces through the PCI bus, but rather do something faster even though the devices logically look to the CPU like they are on the PCI bus.
Incorrect. There are ATA 100 controllers out on the market now that use the 48 bit LBA. In fact, Maxtor is pretty much the only company that does any ATA/133 (and that is because it isn't a finalized standard yet). The IBM and WD drives that you cite are ATA 100.
"The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
Of course, that black will show dust very well, don't you think so?
;)
And birdshit, if it's anything like my car
I'll give you one hint, and one hint only.
*Asus a7v333*
VIA chipsets suck, please, don't blame AMD for via's incompetance (or your poor choice of mainboard)
the next 2.4 release (which come out reasonably quickly, say every month or so)
Err? 2.4.18 was released at the end of February 2002, 2.4.19 was released at the beginning of August 2002; this is October 2002, and 2.4.20 is not yet released. How can you call that every month or so?
What do you think it has that you cant use under Linux today, with the latest 2.4 kernel?
Wireless cards based on the TI ACX 100 chipset, i.e. most of the wireless cards produced since this summer. If it says "Supports 22 mbps", it is unlikely to work under Linux right now.
Doable, I suppose. But what about the
(white in every board I know) silkscreen?
I would imagine that they would change the silkscreen ink to black. Can't be all that hard.
Necessity is the mother of invention.
Laziness is the father.
Serial ATA
Gigabit Lan
IEEE1394 (FireWire)
RAID
Multiple Overclocking features.
http://www.kubuntu.org/
My fault for falling for that troll above. I read his posting history after I responded to him. Check out the other well-known trolls on his "Friends" list.
However, while it may be true that those wireless cards you mentioned dont work with the latest 2.4 kernel, I was referring just to the motherboard mentioned in the article. I'm well aware theres a fair bit of HW that isnt optimally supported under Linux, and some that isnt supported at all.
siri
Ohh I love the uniformed idiots that just mindlessly repeat things without ever bothering to check for facts.
Fact: Heat is directly releated to two things and two things along. How much power a chip uses, and how good your cooling system is at getting rid of that heat.
Now, check out the power consumption of AMD and Intel processors, it's quite clearly documented in their respective tech docs (or at least it is in AMD's tech docs, Intel uses the rather ambigious "thermal design power" number to describe how much power the chip uses, with the TDP being a little bit less than the actual maximum power the chip can use).
Here's a sample for ya:
AMD AthlonXP 2000+ (180nm fab process): 70.0W Max, 62.5W typical
Intel P4 2.0GHz (180nm fab process): 75.3W TDP
AMD AthlonXP 2600+ (130nm fab process): 68.3W Max, 62.0W typical
Intel P4 2.60GHz (130nm fab process): 62.6W TDP
Long story short, these chips are all in the same basic range, all within about 10% of one another except for the old 2.0GHz (Willamette) P4s.
So, if the power used is roughly the same, than the only real differences comes down to how good your cooling system is, and this is why the P4 seems better. See, almost all P4 heatsinks are at least 70x70mm at their base, and most are around 80x80mm. By contrast, a lot of Athlon heatsinks are much smaller 60x60mm. However, if you use one of the 80x80mm heatsinks for an Athlon, guess what? The chip is nice and cool, even with a slow-spining fan that hardly makes any noise.
By the way, Aten sells USB serial adapters for $19.
That page also has a link to Centrix which, at $9 shipping per order, is remaindering USB serial adapters for $4 and USB parallel adapters for $2. I would not argue that that repesents an equilibrium price though.
the SiS 735 is a perfectly solid little chipset, the problem lies elsewhere.
Either
1) you got a half-D-O-A mainboard in the first place
2) your PSU/ram were subpar
3) the mains power to your house is subpar (this ties to the PSU being subpar)
On the other hand, the most troublesome board I've EVER owned was an Abit SH6 (i815E chipset).
Abit are certainly off my list.
(btw, which SiS chipset board was it you had problems with?)
If you want to connect a bunch of drives on a common fast serial connection, there is already a plethora of options, all of which basically serialize SCSI commands: FireWire, Universal Serial Bus 2.0, Fibre Channel, Serial SCSI Architecture (SSA), InfiniBand, and iSCSI.
"it has been running win2k for over 4 days now with out a problem"
If it's running without problems, why are you bitching about them being problematic?
(I notice you didn't mention your actual in-system PSU whilst you were reeling off the UPS stuff.. a flaky PSU can cause extreme twitchiness.)
First the comments. "It has firewire... Oh, I was just kidding. Or was I kidding about the midget"
I saw the apparent Firewire port on the motherboard and got very confused.
His chipset comparison summary page shows no Firewire on any of the mobos except for the SiS one though.
So what's that port?
retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
Cheap, crappy PSUs abound in this industry.
My family has two Athlon systems. Both are rock solid and work wonderfully.
I can't remember what the exact config is of my dad's Athlon, but mine is a 1.1 GHz Tbird in a Epox EP-8KHA motherboard. (VIA KT266). Despite running cheap-ass RAM it's quite stable. (I did have to back the memory timings off a little bit to accomodate aforementioned cheap RAM.)
retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
Hmm, that's peculiar, you're about the fifth person in the last month to tell me that they're having problems with an Athlon rig and an Enermax PSU....
QA issues at Enermax perhaps?
And it won't run XP?.. VIA 4-in-1's?... they'll either fix it perfectly or make it crash and burn in a manner you never thought possible. (such "fun" is why I avoid VIA)