Features To Watch Out For

A few of the products listed here have some exciting new features and technologies, and the respective companies are quite proud of these. A lot of the time when a company advertises a 'unique' feature, it is a load of marketing fluff, but this time round I think a few of them are worth a mention.

ASRock BIOS Update from Internet within BIOS

ASRock have a new software technology coming along to aid BIOS updating. Their feature, as I've been told, will allow users to press a button in the BIOS which will let the motherboard connect to the internet, get and download the latest BIOS, then apply it. All at the touch of a button. Sounds good, right?

A little caveat: it will be for Ethernet wired connections only, where programs are not needed to access the internet, or through an ICS terminal. This may not be available with launch BIOSes, but should be a feature across their Z77 range soon.

ASUS T-Topology Memory

ASUS have outsmarted Intel and have decided to take their technology to another level. This is specifically in terms of memory, and how it is routed through the motherboard. Typically, routing through the memory would occur in a daisy chain type environment, whereby if data was in the furthest memory slot away from the board, it would take longer to get to the CPU, and perhaps cause synchronization issues and delays—all reads had to be done serially between sticks in the same channel.

With ASUS' new technology, they are essentially parallelizing memory reads that are commonly done serially between memory banks. This is part of their 'T-Topology' memory subsystem, which allows synchronization to be dealt with in hardware. This, according to ASUS, should allow for up to a 15% memory overclock beyond the previous methodology, where the motherboard is the limiting factor. In this circumstance, we could be seeing some new memory records being set in dual channel memory.

I have probed ASUS for specific details on how this works, and I am awaiting a response. I hope that by the time we are allowed to release our Ivy Bridge results on Z77 that I will have something more technical to pass on to you about how this works.

ASUS UASP Technology

While not strictly speaking a new technology, ASUS is the first to implement new USB protocols in Windows 7 under Intel platforms. Current USB protocols are very limited, insisting transfers are serial and rigorously monitored. ASRock first broke that with their XFast USB software (note, this was licensed to ASRock), which essentially implemented a new driver protocol. This had beneficial results on USB 2.0 and USB 3.0 transfers, both peak and in regular use. However, ASUS have gone one-step further.

Their software, enabled in X79, implements UASP, which stands for 'USB Attached SCSI Protocol'. This allows the operating system to use the SCSI command set for transferring data across the interface—this at the basic level involves command queuing, out of order execution, and hardware support for streams across USB 3.0.

To take advantage of UASP required a UASP compliant device, typically a modern USB 3.0 device using certain controllers. Unfortunately, that is a requirement of the protocol, not of the hardware itself. But hopefully this time around we will be able to test just how good it is, and whether your next USB 3.0 device will be able to take advantage of an ASUS only feature.

Biostar TZ77XE4 Conclusions
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  • Zoomer - Tuesday, April 10, 2012 - link

    It doesn't matter, firewire maxes out at 800Mbps, which the PCI standard can easily handle ht 133 MBps.

    Of course, shared bandwidth is an issue, but reworking designs / buying the PCIe design rises issues of cost and reduces the number of PCIe lanes for other devices that can better use the bandwidth.
  • prophet001 - Monday, April 9, 2012 - link

    Seeing at the layer that Virtu is running and reading about what it claims to be capable of, is there any reason this could not cure once and for all the micro-stutter associated with multiple video cards?
  • jonyah - Monday, April 9, 2012 - link

    It's good to know my Z68 (asus maximus iv-extreme) still hasn't been bested. I see nothing from any of these boards that beats what I've been running for some time now. Plus i have more usb 3.0 ports (12 to be exact).
  • flashbacck - Monday, April 9, 2012 - link

    For my own PC, I'm interested in seeing what mATX sized Z77 boards there are. Often they have weird expansion slot combinations or positions. Looking at what Z68 boards are out now, it surprises me how many still have PCI slots. I would've thought they'd be replaced by PCIe 1x's by now.

    Also, anything about UEFI bios implementations? Was the promise of fast booting UEFI bioses ever fulfilled?
  • Aruneh - Friday, April 13, 2012 - link

    I'm planning on making my next build a mATX one, and would be interested in seeing some reviews of high quality boards with lots of features. The Gigabyte mentioned in this article sadly seems to be a cheaper model.
  • CharonPDX - Monday, April 9, 2012 - link

    "...including 8800 and 2400 series..."

    What, are we back in 2007?

    Oh, wait... AMD 8800 and nVidia 2400, not the other way around...

    Wait, that's not right either. What's the 2400 referring to?
  • Ryan Smith - Tuesday, April 10, 2012 - link

    Radeon HD 2400; AMD's low end series for the HD 2000 generation in 2007.
  • extide - Tuesday, April 10, 2012 - link

    You had it right the first time... That phrase in the article was specifically pointing out the broad range of compatibility of the Lucid solution.
  • extide - Tuesday, April 10, 2012 - link

    The first time as in in 8800 = nVidia, and 2400 = AMD
  • kristof007 - Monday, April 9, 2012 - link

    I don't know if this helps or you wan to put an update but NewEgg has the boards out and prices on them (I am not sure if they sell it at MSRP or not). Just a thought if you want to update those "TBC" prices.

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