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Asus Demos First Intel P55

adeelarshad82 writes "Intel's X58 chipset is the platform of choice for enthusiasts, but Intel serves a heck of a big audience. To please that larger crowd and bring down prices, the company is planning a mainstream iteration of its Nehalem architecture: the P55 chipset. It's designed to work with the forthcoming Lynnfield CPUs, and offers performance close to LGA1366 chips at a much cheaper price. Recently Asus demoed its first intel P55 chip and released exclusive photos. Asus claims to have run its new boards with engineering samples of the Core i5-750 at a 77 percent overclock, boosting speeds from 2.66 GHz to 4.7 GHz. Asus admits this wasn't necessarily stable, but still — that's fast. And on liquid cooling, the boards reportedly hit speeds of 5.1 GHz."

6 of 48 comments (clear)

  1. And it's got Turbo Boost by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 4, Informative

    Working article link (from Google)
    http://www.pcper.com/article.php?aid=752

    Now all I need is a molecular bonded shell and a Super Pursuit mode, and I'd be ready to go.

    1. Re:And it's got Turbo Boost by TheBig1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      While I agree that changing speed makes sense, why have it in the form of a Turbo button? Software CPU scaling (present in my 2 year old laptop, probably was around for some time before that) allows the machine to run at a low frequency (e.g. I have mine defaulting to 800Mhz) until the CPU usage exceeds a threshold; it then steps up progressively to the max speed. If you set your max speed to be OC'd, and include some thermal limiting to step down if sustained max speed is too fast, then you really have the best of all worlds.

      Cheers

    2. Re:And it's got Turbo Boost by Peter+La+Casse · · Score: 2, Insightful

      While I agree that changing speed makes sense, why have it in the form of a Turbo button?

      Nostalgia.

  2. I don't overclock by anss123 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    My computer @ 2.4Gig spews out about 120Watt.

    To cool it I use five big fans, making the noise out of this setup is a bit loud but acceptable (a little less than the noise out of a Nintendo Wii perhaps, though a Wii's noise is thinner and more annoying).

    The only thing that interests me about this new CPU is if I can bring down the power usage to about 100 watt (like my former computer) while keeping the perf, but pretty much all that is reported these day is how much so-and so chip overclocks.

    Annoying, but that's where the money is I guess.

  3. Re:No benchmarks? by Chris+Burke · · Score: 3, Funny

    There's no such thing as "chip performance". All that matters is tastiness.

    You say that, but then someone hands you a bag of chips made with Olestra and sure they're tasty but in about half an hour you'll be feeling the importance of chip "performance".

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  4. Lokking forward to the "P55C" version of this. by forkazoo · · Score: 2, Funny

    That's the version that will ship with MMX, which I am very excited about!

    Seriously, I love when big companies start recycle product names / numbers fifteen years later.