disolitude said:
Overclocking was alwas associated with "Z" boards. However with Haswell Intel screwed up the Bios and allowed for all boards to overclock...equally. Benchmarking folks are getting same results with a 80 dollar "H" board as with a 200 dollar "overclocking optimized Z" boards. The issue is that Intel is going to patch these boards so if you are currently overclocking, you will get a security update through Windows Update. IMO they can freely patch the existing baords before they ship a new batch but updating the boards already sold is rotten. Otherwise, what are you using the Xeon for, out of curiosity? |
Oh, okay. I had just assumed that it was only for Z again like with IB. Taking out support for it after the fact though is pretty bad.
Not too much at the moment, it's just become my main system. Like I said it is an ES (Engineering Sample), so on this one can't clock as high as the later released CPU. Up to 2.5ghz using 7-8 cores compared to the standard one which clocks up to 2.8ghz using 7-8 cores. Motherboard compatibility is also an issue, which is which is why I went with the Asrock X79 board as they have good compatibility with Xeon E5 cpus.
Since it is an ES CPU it was pretty cheap though, I paid about $300 for the CPU and picked up the mobo used for about $130, so it was a pretty cheap upgrade, especially after selling my IB Xeon E3 CPU and Z77 mobo. The IB Xeon E3 was 4core/4threads so this 8core/16thread Xeon E5 is a nice upgrade for cheap. 20mb L3 cache as well!
I've seen a pretty good deal on an Asrock X79 Extreme4-M matx board so I might pick that up for my matx case and use this CPU in there as my server box if I ca find a good deal on another ES CPU, possibly when IB-E stuff releases.

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