We first reported basic information about VIA chipsets for Intel Socket 775 about 7 months ago. At that point, road maps pointed to sampling in September of 2004. There have been changes along the way and numerous delays, but today, VIA finally introduces three new chipsets for Prescott Socket T. VIA has watched the very sluggish market for Intel Socket 775 motherboards, and they believe that they have found a better solution which people will want to buy. All the new chipsets feature PCI Express, but unique to VIA, all three chipsets can run at 1066 FSB and use either DDR or DDR2 memory. The PT880 PRO also supports PCI Express graphics or AGP graphics or both on the same motherboard.

VIA is convinced that the high current cost of adoption of the new Socket 775 technology is putting a damper on Socket 775 sales. DDR2 is still more expensive than DDR and VIA projects DDR will still outsell DDR2 until at least the 4th quarter of 2006 - some 2 years away. 915/925X motherboards are also more expensive than competing solutions - about $150 average for 915 and $200+ for 925X/XE. These cost factors, combined with poor availability of PCIe parts, has led to a very sluggish adoption of Socket 775. In addition, there is very little to distinguish 925X/XE performance from 915, except for the somewhat artificial barrier that only 925XE supports the 1066 FSB (currently only one very expensive CPU supports 1066 FSB). We would also add that the lack of any performance advantage for Socket 775 has also had a dramatic impact on sales.

To address these market forces, VIA has introduced three new chipsets for Socket 775. Flexibility is the key throughout the new chipset line, as VIA emphasizes that manufacturers can choose the architecture and features that customers want. VIA believes that this flexibility, compared to the rigid requirements of the Intel 915/925x chipsets, will give manufacturers and customers plenty of incentive to choose a VIA chipset solution for Socket 775.

The New VIA Chipsets
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  • ChineseDemocracyGNR - Monday, January 31, 2005 - link

    #14,

    we don't even know if the PT894 Pro will be more expensive than the PT894, or if it's just a name to help motherboard companies promote their DualGFX products. The nVidia nForce4 SLI is $20 more expensive than the Ultra.

    As far as "restoring VIA's reputation", they're not going to focus on that when releasing new products. I have worked with their recent chipsets (PT880, PT800, KT880, KT600, K8T800, K8T800Pro) and I don't think there's anything else they could other than continue to bring good chipsets at low prices to make people that had a bad experience with them 5 years ago change their minds.
  • quanta - Monday, January 31, 2005 - link

    If the nForce4 Ultra/SLI mod is of any indication, the PT894[Pro] will be a crippleware scam! Unlike NVIDIA, VIA no longer have any marketing lead to afford ripping off motherboard makers. Support for DDR memory isn't going to restore VIA's reputation, especially with the emerging NVIDIA chipset on Intel platform...
  • ChineseDemocracyGNR - Monday, January 31, 2005 - link

    Just for the curious, PCPer has pictures of PT880 Pro and PT894 Pro boards. So what? Well, the PT894 Pro is using the VT8251 southbridge. :)

    http://www.pcper.com/article.php?aid=114&type=...

    These two look very much like Jetway boards from the color scheme. ABIT's PT880Pro is also there.
  • MS - Monday, January 31, 2005 - link

    "Amd socket 939 = socket 754 + 184 pin = 938 pin "

    That's not exactly how it works, there are a number of power and ground pins that are not tied to the CPU at all. In other words, the calculation comes out somewhat close to reality but that is just coincidence. Otherwise, the Socket940 which needs to use 8 extra data lines and additional clock input would have a much higher pin count than just one over 939.
  • Wesley Fink - Monday, January 31, 2005 - link

    ALL - We apologize for the confusion this morning. The article posted at 6AM when the VIA NDA was 12 Noon EST (9AM PST). As soon as we realized this the article came down and went back up at the correct NDA time.

    #6 - Corrected
  • Dranzerk - Monday, January 31, 2005 - link

    Wow, this will make for a nice upgrade path for people. If they show up on market fast enough, and ample supply they should do well.
  • Jep4444 - Monday, January 31, 2005 - link

    Socket 754 and 939 have a few useless pins. I believe 939 has an extra useless pin.

    I'm not sure if thats how it works though.
  • nserra - Monday, January 31, 2005 - link

    The power of the DDR dimm is drained by the amd processor, or by board? If its the board how many pins are needed? Thanks in advance.

    #avijay thanks but you didnt answer my question:
    - Amd socket 939 = socket 754 + 184 pin = 938 pin
  • avijay - Monday, January 31, 2005 - link

    #5 skt939 has dual channel memory controller, not single channel like skt754. I think you can add that for the extra pin in the pin count.
  • avijay - Monday, January 31, 2005 - link

    As always, a very nice article! Just one thing to point out:
    (Page 6) table:
    VIA PT894 Reference Board Specifications
    CPU Interface Socket 939 Athlon 64 ???

    shouldn't that be skt 775!
    you might like to correct that wesley.

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