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From: John Lewis on 7 Apr 2008 00:14 And other items the MB manufacturers fail to mention....AMD 780G, NVIDIA 790i, Gigabyte 680i ...........at least....... Let the buyer beware.. read all specs thoroughly. Assume NO support if a particular CPU is not mentioned in the "supported-CPU" list on the manufacturer's website. See:- http://www.anandtech.com/mb/showdoc.aspx?i=3279 John Lewis
From: Paul on 7 Apr 2008 01:00 John Lewis wrote: > And other items the MB manufacturers fail to mention....AMD 780G, > NVIDIA 790i, Gigabyte 680i ...........at least....... > > Let the buyer beware.. read all specs thoroughly. Assume NO support if > a particular CPU is not mentioned in the "supported-CPU" list on the > manufacturer's website. > > See:- > > http://www.anandtech.com/mb/showdoc.aspx?i=3279 > > John Lewis I caught that already, by reading between the lines on a CPUSupport web page. It's been a while, since a motherboard maker had the nerve to shave off a few watts on the Vcore circuit, preventing the usage of high end processors. http://groups.google.ca/group/alt.comp.hardware.overclocking.amd/msg/09172326e7769155?dmode=source Since so many of the manufacturers chose to do that, it would seem someone directed them to do it. I cannot imagine what possessed them - they must have realized when they did it, there'd be blow-back from doing something that stupid. It is one reason, a visit to the CPUSupport web page, is one item on the buyer check list. No matter how many times you look, and everything is grand, there'll always be a day when a surprise awaits... Paul
From: ~misfit~ on 8 Apr 2008 22:25
Somewhere on teh intarweb "Paul" typed: > John Lewis wrote: [selective snippage] >> Let the buyer beware.. read all specs thoroughly. Assume NO support >> if a particular CPU is not mentioned in the "supported-CPU" list on >> the manufacturer's website. > > It is one reason, a visit to the CPUSupport web page, is one > item on the buyer check list. Exactly. I don't see the big deal here to be honest. When enough research was done all those boards that the guys at AnandTech blew up only blew with CPUs that weren't on the supported list. If I'm buying a mobo with a particular CPU in mind, either now or in the future, I check the mobo manufacturers CPU support page. Only common sense really. It is for this reason I bought an 8 phase PWM mobo and carefully studied this page before buying: http://support.asus.com/cpusupport/cpusupport.aspx?SLanguage=en-us&model=P5K-E/WIFI-AP It's up to the buyer to be sure that what they're buying is suitable for the intended purpose, as always. I mean, the concept has been around long enough that even the Romans had a term for it: Caveat Emptor. There's nothing new here. Cheers, -- Shaun. |