F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Discovered a cool find in my grandparents' attic :D

Discovered a cool find in my grandparents' attic :D

Discovered a cool find in my grandparents' attic :D

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POKE_PRESLEY
Member
177
06-08-2016, 10:20 PM
#21
As PCIe bandwidth grows, do you think CPUs on separate boards might eventually return? Perhaps with a swapable BIOS chipset. That would be interesting if you could purchase one motherboard and simply replace the CPU board and BIOS when upgrading. The upgrade route would depend on PCIe versions rather than sockets. I doubt it would succeed due to latency concerns.
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POKE_PRESLEY
06-08-2016, 10:20 PM #21

As PCIe bandwidth grows, do you think CPUs on separate boards might eventually return? Perhaps with a swapable BIOS chipset. That would be interesting if you could purchase one motherboard and simply replace the CPU board and BIOS when upgrading. The upgrade route would depend on PCIe versions rather than sockets. I doubt it would succeed due to latency concerns.

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xRinneganDeath
Junior Member
2
06-09-2016, 05:25 PM
#22
It's not in MFG's best interest to increase modularity unless it helps them integrate more easily and boost sales.
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xRinneganDeath
06-09-2016, 05:25 PM #22

It's not in MFG's best interest to increase modularity unless it helps them integrate more easily and boost sales.

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476ms
Member
203
06-17-2016, 12:44 AM
#23
They really stand out, huh? I’m curious about how everything was arranged. It seems the memory controller wasn’t part of the CPU, which makes it even more interesting to figure out how all the components worked together.
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476ms
06-17-2016, 12:44 AM #23

They really stand out, huh? I’m curious about how everything was arranged. It seems the memory controller wasn’t part of the CPU, which makes it even more interesting to figure out how all the components worked together.

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gamerman8889
Junior Member
5
06-17-2016, 02:13 AM
#24
Even with today's advancements, the speed would remain limited by the overall input requirements.
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gamerman8889
06-17-2016, 02:13 AM #24

Even with today's advancements, the speed would remain limited by the overall input requirements.

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megapixel74
Member
224
06-19-2016, 10:21 AM
#25
Memory controller and related parts resided in the northbridge, while the interface stayed on the southbridge. Motherboards previously featured two chips managing the system, which explains why "chipset" is still used. Nowadays, we don’t have separate "sets"; the term remains just "chipset." The memory controller moved to the CPU, and graphics now connects directly to it.
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megapixel74
06-19-2016, 10:21 AM #25

Memory controller and related parts resided in the northbridge, while the interface stayed on the southbridge. Motherboards previously featured two chips managing the system, which explains why "chipset" is still used. Nowadays, we don’t have separate "sets"; the term remains just "chipset." The memory controller moved to the CPU, and graphics now connects directly to it.

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