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Small Form Factor Dual Opteron

Psionicist writes "IWILL has announced a new barebone, the IWILL ZMAXdp. Based on the nVIDIA nForce3 Pro 250Gb chipset, the computer offers dual Opteron support in a SFF format. "Volume production is planned in September, with a suggested price of $499. IWILL plans to get attention in workstation market. ZMAXdp will include proprietary form factor motherboard, 300W power supply, up to 2x3.5" HDD bay, and 1xAGP; PCI and SI can offer various configurations for workstation market demand." according to IWILL's homepage. I will take one, please."

19 of 215 comments (clear)

  1. Heat management? by Radi-0-head · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm extremely curious how they figured out how to manage the heat generated by TWO processors while leaving room in that tiny box for anything else.

    Regardless, my boxers are wet. Must have one.

    1. Re:Heat management? by ruiner5000 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      They haven't released dimensions yet. Also you can put 4 Opterons in a 1U server, so why not two in a small form factor? Remember there are also low power variant Opterons. With some good ventilation it could put the PowerMac G5 to shame, and amazingly still cost much less.

      --
      ignorance is bliss. googlefiberatx.com
    2. Re:Heat management? by alienw · · Score: 5, Informative

      Opterons run very cool. Mine runs considerably cooler than the P3-800 it replaced.

    3. Re:Heat management? by SD-VI · · Score: 5, Informative

      Even the regular Opteron is no Xeon; typical heat output for a regular Opteron 244 is estimated at 58W (I believe Xbit Labs did the testing), and they've got Oversized Novelty Dies to spread that over as well (something like 193 square millimeters, courtesy of x86-64 and a 1MB L2 cache).

      I suspect they're looking into low-voltage Opterons, though, which would mean even lower heat consumption. Max heat dissipation for the entire line of .13u Opteron HEs (LV) is 55W; consider that max heat dissipation for the entire line of regular .13u Opterons is, what, 89W and as I said heat dissipation under load for a normal (old-stepping, actually) 1.8GHz/x44 Opteron is 58W, and you're getting some pretty chilly-running chips. Max heat spec for the .13u Opteron EE (ULV) line is 30W, which puts it in Tualatin territory.

      So yeah, reversing the trend towards hotter chips is a very very good thing.

    4. Re:Heat management? by Sivar · · Score: 4, Informative
      That would be cool, but they are really priced out of the workstation market. They are server chips all the way unless AMD makes them more affordable.
      Er, the workstation market has traditionally been dominated by HP PA-RISC & Sun UltraSPARC-based systems, and other high-price hardware. The AMD Opteron 2xx series outperforms both and is several times cheaper.
      Twin Opteron 242's are around $415 USD for BOTH, and that is for consumers. Even if manufacturers like Iwill didn't get bulk discounts, that isn't even a drop in the bucket for a professional workstation.
      --
      Computer Science is no more about computers than astronomy is about telescopes. --E. W. Dijkstra
  2. A Computer that will fit Longhorn MIN. Standards by Dozix007 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Well, the specifications of the Board and proccessor capabilities (which are very nice), may fit the Longhorn minimum standards reported on Slashdot a while back. Maybe we will be able to hit their recommended standards in three or four more years.

  3. I have a Idea! by matlantis · · Score: 5, Funny

    Nice now I can fit more of these motherboards in my jacket and then run like crazy out of Fry's

  4. Re:I don't get it. by irokitt · · Score: 5, Funny

    Not only a cure for tiny cubicles, it doubles as a foot warmer!

    --
    If my answers frighten you, stop asking scary questions.
  5. open-source freindly != Nvidia... by James4765 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Hope they've got Linux/BSD drivers for it - since MS still doesn't have XP 64-bit ready, and we all know that Nvidia won't release the programming info on the (very, very proprietary) chipset.

    Guess the $499 is no memory, processors, drives, or whatnot - but it's still cheaper than the Tyan or MSI mobos. Just gotta save up the $2000 for the Opteron 250's...<grin>

    1. Re:open-source freindly != Nvidia... by klevin · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Bummer about IWill using Nvidia. I was really looking forward to the the Nvidia chipsets, "back in the day." Unfortunately, the whole "no specs for you lot" bit put a damper on that.


      Since this sort of purchase would be of the "my money, my choice" category, I think I'll go w/ one of the inevitable competitors who comes out w/ a similar design. This might work well for that home-brewed PVR I've been planning for the last two years. Now, if I could only come up with a source of income that would let me pay for it.

  6. Re:UMMMMM... by ruiner5000 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Because there are two Opterons in it. I was talking to Iwill about it today. Yes, single chip solution as in the nForce 3 chipset, as is common knowledge, integrates northbridge and southbridge functions into one chip which reduces latency, and improves performance. Single chipset, two CPUs, less valuable PCB space since no separate southbridge is required, less traces required, easier to make a smaller design. nforce 3 info.

    --
    ignorance is bliss. googlefiberatx.com
  7. Opteron's may not produce so much heat by ahmetaa · · Score: 5, Informative

    AMD Opteron Processor Models 146/246/846 HE series produces only 50Waats and EE series produces 35 watts. this means even dual chips may produce less heat than a Intel Presscot P4. HE and EE series will be unveiled this year.

    http://www.amdboard.com/opteron_low_power.html

  8. Re:1xAGP - workstation?! by ruiner5000 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That's funny because it shows 4 DIMMs, which presently means you could put 8GB of memory, 4GB if there end up to be only two in the final design. Yeah, also you can put an AGP 8X Radeon X800. Or even a FireGL. Aren't those fast video cards? Wait, there is more. RAID, in fact two Raptors in RAID 0 sounds good to me thanks to two hard drive bays. Not to mention the driver level Firewall and enhanced remote management capabilities of the nForcer 3 250 Gigabit ethernet. Yeah, come to think of it who would want that in a workstation. I mean you could put in two 2.4GHz Opteron 250s. That is over kill. Heck, for that kind of money you could buy half of a PowerMac G5 dual 2.0GHz box. And the cool thing about the PowerMac is that it is three times larger!!!! Sweet!!!

    --
    ignorance is bliss. googlefiberatx.com
  9. Re:A Computer that will fit Longhorn MIN. Standard by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Remember, Longhorn isn't going to come out for another couple of years, so most of those standards were intended to staunch shortsightedness.

    "Why would someone want to do X? It requires hundreds of gigabytes of disk space, and runs poorly on anything less than gigabit ethernet."

    By 2007, most any new system will exceed those requirements-- so if a new user wants to perform task X, they will be able to.

  10. Re:dual Athlon FX by ruiner5000 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Up until now the Athlon 64 FX and Opteron are identical. That will change eventually. No, the Athlon 64 FX is not SMP capable. It just has the clock multiplier unlocked.

    --
    ignorance is bliss. googlefiberatx.com
  11. SMP Gaming, quit it already! by Anubis333 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why do all the OCer's and Gamers always drool over Dual proc boards? There are *very few* SMP capable games at all. This is one huge old myth I would like to dispell for these people. To my old gamer knowledge, only ID and maybe a few other people have made SMP capable game engines, and then, they weren't fully SMP capable, and it only mattered if you used software rendering. There have been one or two SMP game servers.. Adding another processor is virtually useless for a 'gaming machine' unless you want to be running Seti@Home one the other processor while you're 'fragging' or whatever you kids are calling it these days.

    I can only think of a few uses for a dual processor machine for '1337' gamers and OCers and it's things like restricting apps to individual processors, if you *must* encode the latest DVD you rented from blockbuster while teaming up in a death match -and most people don't know this is possible. There are though more than a few SMP capable DVD ripping/encoding apps, but it hardly justifies two opterons.

    These things do look great for rendering though.

    1. Re:SMP Gaming, quit it already! by BlackHawk-666 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Doom III will allow the audio engine to run on a seperate processor. That may not be a huge gain in speed, but it is still some. Let's not forget, the OS will also be running at the same time as your game, and that could run mainly on the other processor. I'd expect maybe a 7% boost in performance from having dual proc even if the game wasn't optimised for it. Now, if they got some of the workload running asynchronously and in a seperate thread/process then we might see some real speed improvements e.g. graphics handling on one thread, calculating interactions, physics and explosions on another, sound on a third thread...etc.

      --
      All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
    2. Re:SMP Gaming, quit it already! by NerveGas · · Score: 5, Informative


      You're pretty much right, but soon won't be.

      Doom3, however, is fully multi-threaded in order to support SMP systems. That means that the games which license the Doom3 engine will be multithreaded. And it also means that anyone who wants to challenge Id will also have to step up to the plate.

      Earlier today, I heard someone moaning that the need to support multiple processers was useless baggage that would pull down the video game industry. Quite the contrary, increases in computing performance have always helped the video game industry, and the ability to tap into two processers instead of one is another way that they can increase their use of yoru CPU cycles.

      There are a *lot* of simultaneoush things happening in a video game - in addition to the rendering and sound, you've also got to handle AI for a good number of characters, and physics for a (usually) large number of objects, and those are two things that can chew up CPU cycles.

      Sure, it takes some work and intelligence to get all of the code to work together. But that's alright, that's how things have been improving for a long time now.

      steve

      --
      Oh, you're not stuck, you're just unable to let go of the onion rings.
  12. Just so long as.... by NerveGas · · Score: 4, Interesting


    Just so long as they actually give you a set of memory slots for each chip. Some companies (Tyan) have put out quad-boards that only have memory slots for two of the chips. It'll work, and it saves a lot of real estate, but then you're completely losing one of the greatest strengths of the Opterons.

    steve-O

    --
    Oh, you're not stuck, you're just unable to let go of the onion rings.