Gigabyte Unveils Core i5 Motherboard
Core i5 isn't necessarily a new term floating around the Internet, however lately there's been quite a bit of talk about the "Core i7 lite," and now there's a motherboard to support it.
Earlier this week, we reported that P55 motherboards compatible with Intel's Lynnfield CPUs (aka Core i5) may actually start shipping in July, and sure enough, Gigabyte's GA-IBP made a grand appearance at CeBIT this afternoon, months ahead of June's Computex "big reveal" as we originally predicted. In comparison to the meatier Core i7, the Core i5 serves as a cheaper, "lite" alternative for consumers wanting plenty of power but need to pinch pennies.
According to Engadget, on-hand gigabyte representative were tight-lipped about the specifics of the GA-IBP motherboard, saying that many of the details were still under an NDA. Additionally, Intel's booth proved just as uninformative, claiming that no Core i5 prototypes were available at the show. Still, after recent reports circulating about possible Core i5 boards shipping soon, it's good to actually see the physical product.
Gigabyte actually did post a few details next to the motherboard at the show, revealing that the GA-IBP offers dual channel DDR3, ATI CrossFireX and Nvidia SLI support, and Blu-ray playback supported by high quality 106dB SNR ALC8898 HD audio. Gigabyte's board also features an on-board 2-gigabyte Ethernet LAN connection with Teaming functionality as well as Power/Reset/Cir CMOS onboard buttons for easy workbench operations.
If all goes according to plan, look for both the processor and motherboard to hit the market in July.
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- Core ,
- i5 ,
- motherboard
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really surprised Nvidia carried its BIOS SLI licensing over to thee i5/P55 platform with all the halabaloo thats going on between them and Intel but itss good to see its happened.
Well the chipset was probably created before that.
Damn if the CPU's and motherboards come to less than an AM3 set now and perform just as well or better then I think I might hold off buying an am3 system.
maybe
still the SLI support is not built into the chipset, what happens, allegedly is that once a manufacturer has their board ready they can send it to Nvidia who test it to make sure it complies with basic SLI criteria, if it does and their willing to pay the "fee" they get a "Cookie" for their BIOS that the SLI driver installer will recognise and allow them to install.