| Thread Tools |
26th February 2010, 15:26 | #1 |
Madshrimp Join Date: May 2002 Location: 7090/Belgium
Posts: 79,022
| Intel Sandy Bridge supports PCIe 3.0 The PCIe 3.0 support is integrated in the Sandy Bridge and so is the direct routing to EC. Intel also has a feature called De Muxed EDP, something that provides concurrency with discrete graphics, all meant for reduction in discrete card power consumption. All in all Sandy Bridge definitely looks like a huge step forward. http://www.fudzilla.com/content/view/17846/34/
__________________ |
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
More Sandy Bridge performance numbers | jmke | WebNews | 0 | 6th August 2010 09:34 |
Intel plans to deliberately limit Sandy Bridge overclocking | jmke | WebNews | 6 | 27th July 2010 15:26 |
Intel to Ramp Up Sandy Bridge Aggressively on Desktop Market | jmke | WebNews | 0 | 17th June 2010 01:00 |
Intel Sandy Bridge Quad-Core Processor Tested | jmke | WebNews | 0 | 10th June 2010 20:59 |
Intel briefly demos next-gen Sandy Bridge laptop | jmke | WebNews | 0 | 2nd June 2010 22:41 |
Intel Core i7 980X: Just Before Sandy Bridge | jmke | WebNews | 0 | 10th May 2010 16:00 |
Sandy Bridge dual-core mobile CPU ~20 percent faster compared to Arrandale | jmke | WebNews | 0 | 17th February 2010 13:40 |
Intel Sandy Bridge 32nm comes in Q1 2011 | jmke | WebNews | 0 | 2nd February 2010 11:25 |
Intel Tick Tock slows down: Sandy Bridge slips into 2011? | jmke | WebNews | 0 | 21st December 2009 13:54 |
Intel PCIe SSD outputs 1.076 million IOPS | jmke | WebNews | 0 | 24th September 2009 12:02 |
Thread Tools | |
| |