The Chipset - Meet Intel's X58

Nehalem moves the North Bridge and memory controller on-die, but just like in the AMD world there's still a need for an off-die chipset, in this case it's Intel's brand new X58.

The Intel X58 chipset is a two chip solution although later next year Intel will introduce a single chip solution alongside the mainstream version of Nehalem (which will use a different socket). Traditionally Intel referred to its North Bridge as the MCH, shorthand for Memory Controller Hub; that definition no longer applies to Nehalem so X58 is called an I/O Hub (IOH).

The X58 IOH attaches to the same ICH10 (I/O Controller Hub) that is used in Intel's 4-series chipsets.

The biggest feature of X58 is that with proper "certification" by NVIDIA, motherboard makers can include support for the right BIOS flags to allow NVIDIA's drivers to enable SLI on the platform. Meaning the X58 will be the first Intel chipset to support both CrossFire and SLI multi-GPU solutions without the use of any NVIDIA silicon. There's a per-motherboard fee from NVIDIA for each certified X58 board sold and thus not all boards will be certified, the most prominent of which is Intel's own X58 board. Luckily we also had access to ASUS' P6T Deluxe which is certified, giving us the ability to look at CrossFire and SLI scaling on X58 vs. other platforms.

Turbo Mode: Gimmicky or Useful? X58 Multi-GPU Scaling
Comments Locked

73 Comments

View All Comments

  • fzkl - Monday, November 3, 2008 - link

    "Where Nehalem really succeeds however is in anything involving video encoding or 3D rendering"

    We have new CPU that does Video encoding and 3D Rendering really well while at the same time the GPU manufacturers are offloading these applications to the GPU.

    The CPU Vs GPU debate heats up more.
    _______________________________________________________________
    www.topicbean.com
  • Griswold - Tuesday, November 4, 2008 - link

    Wheres the product that offloads encoding to GPUs - all of them, from both makers - as a publicly available product? I havent seen that yet. Of course, we havent seen Core i7 in the wild yet either, but I bet it will be many moons before there is that single encoding suite that is ready for primetime regardless of the card that is sitting in your machine. On the other hand, I can encode my stuff right now with my current Intel or AMD products and will just move them over to the upcoming products without having to think about it.

    Huge difference. The debate isnt really a debate yet, if you're doing more than just talking about it.
  • haukionkannel - Monday, November 3, 2008 - link

    Well if both CPU and GPU are better for video encoding, the better! Even now the rendering takes forever.
    So there is not any problem if GPU helps allready good 3d render CPU. Everything that gives more speed is just bonus!

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now