
Channelweb.com received word from sources close to Intel that everyone else should be seeing shipments of the Gainestown processors in the not too distant future, with the upcoming Intel Solutions Summit acting as a springboard to show the units off to prospective integrators. It's said that reactions have been mixed on the readiness of the supply channel to accept these chips, with some noting that supporting mainboards have been easy to find while others are apparently not looking in all the right places. Early estimates are pegging the nine CPU family -- which range in clock speeds from 2.0GHz to 3.2GHz -- with prices spanning the gamut from $224 to a staggering $1,600, though Intel has yet to come out and stamp those with its approval. |
This is good news, but with the corequisite requirements I don't expect to see these things doing near as well as the previous generation. >> a staggering $1,600 You nailed it on that. With today's economy, I would expect to see less and less concentration on performance and more focus on power consumption and manufacturing costs for the next year or two... or four. AMD may have been suffering recently, but it suddenly seems that they at least have their priorities in alignment with the market. |
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I'm looking forward to seeing the high-end workstations that will launch in the coming months with these processors at the helm. :) I'm an IT geek who supports design engineers, so I hope the new platform will offer a boost. |