Intel Developer Forum Spring 2003 - Technology Showcase
by Anand Lal Shimpi on February 19, 2003 12:51 PM EST- Posted in
- Trade Shows
Intel's 865 & 875
As we mentioned in the Newsletter yesterday, Intel's Springdale and Canterwood chipsets will be called the 865 and 875 respectively. Their features are best summarized by the following table:
Intel
Chipsets in 2003
|
||||
Chipset:
|
865P
(Springdale-P)
|
865PE
(Springdale-PE)
|
865G
(Springdale-G)
|
875
(Canterwood)
|
Release Timeframe |
May
|
May
|
May
|
May
|
FSB Support |
533/400MHz
|
800/533MHz
|
800/533MHz
|
800/533MHz
|
Memory Support |
Dual
DDR266/333
|
Dual
DDR333/400
|
Dual
DDR333/400
|
Dual
DDR333/400
|
Graphics Support |
AGP
8X
|
AGP
8X
|
AGP
8X
845GE Graphics core |
AGP
8X
|
Additional Features |
Replaces
845PE Chipset
ICH5 w/ Serial ATA Support |
Replaces
845PE Chipset
ICH5 w/ Serial ATA Support |
Replaces
845G/GE Chipset
ICH5 w/ Serial ATA Support |
Replaces
850E Chipset
"Turbo Mode" ICH5 w/ Serial ATA Support ECC Memory Support |
Intel had a number of 865 motherboards running at the Technology Showcase, mainly in their Powersville concept PC designs:
Intel's Powersville motherboard fits the new Bigwater form factor that Intel announced a year ago; the purpose of this motherboard was to develop a proof of concept of the Bigwater layout with a next-generation Pentium 4 platform, in this case the 865 chipset with a Pentium 4 3.0GHz (800MHz FSB).
The 865MCH had a massive heatsink, much larger than anything we've ever seen on a desktop chipset before - partially because of the fact that it is still using passive cooling:
Looking at the motherboard, you can see that it has native Serial ATA support built onto the board itself; closer inspection reveals that there's no external controller, and that the Serial ATA is running natively through the South Bridge (ICH5).
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