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Intel B75, H77, Q75, Q77, Z75, and Z77 desktop chipsets, and the HM70, HM75, HM76, HM77, QM77, QS77, and UM77 mobile chipsets, and the C216 workstation chipset, used with the Ivy Bridge CPU. Successor to Cougar Point. Reference unknown. 2010 Patsburg: Chipset Intel X79 chipset, and the C600 series of chipsets for two-socket servers.
Intel i945GC northbridge with Pentium Dual-Core microprocessor. This article provides a list of motherboard chipsets made by Intel, divided into three main categories: those that use the PCI bus for interconnection (the 4xx series), those that connect using specialized "hub links" (the 8xx series), and those that connect using PCI Express (the 9xx series).
The vast majority of Intel server chips of the Xeon E3, Xeon E5, and Xeon E7 product lines support VT-d. The first—and least powerful—Xeon to support VT-d was the E5502 launched Q1'09 with two cores at 1.86 GHz on a 45 nm process. [2] Many or most Xeons subsequent to this support VT-d.
View of the socket LGA 1155 on an Intel Core i7 Sandy Bridge 2600K model CPU Celeron G530 "Sandy Bridge" installed on a Socket 1155. LGA 1155, also called Socket H2, is a zero insertion force flip-chip land grid array (LGA) CPU socket designed by Intel for their CPUs based on the Sandy Bridge (second generation core) and Ivy Bridge (third generation) microarchitectures.
ASRock received a Tom's Hardware 2012 Recommended Buy Award for their X79 Extreme4 motherboard, [14] and also won the Xbit labs 2012 Editor Recommended Award with Z77 Extreme4. [15] Furthermore, ASRock Z68 Extreme7 Gen3, Fatal1ty Z68 Professional Gen3 and the mini PC series was awarded three 2011 Taiwan Brand Awards.
The following is a partial list of Intel CPU microarchitectures. The list is incomplete, additional details can be found in Intel's tick–tock model, process–architecture–optimization model and Template:Intel processor roadmap.
DMI 1.0, introduced in 2004 with a data transfer rate of 1 GB/s with a ×4 link.. DMI 2.0, introduced in 2011, doubles the data transfer rate to 2 GB/s with a ×4 link.It is used to link an Intel CPU with the Intel Platform Controller Hub (PCH), which supersedes the historic implementation of a separate northbridge and southbridge.
Recent motherboards as of October 2017 that support it are Intel's Z and X series chipsets (Z68, Z77, Z87, Z97, Z170, Z270, Z370, X79, X99 and X299) along with AMD's 990FX, X370 and X399 chipsets. [27] Earlier chipsets, such as the Intel X58, could support 2-way SLI over 16 lane PCI-e.