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Janusz11
06-29-2008, 01:57 PM
Hello all!

I'm planing to put myself a new computer together and the CPU is most probably going to be a Intel Core2 Duo E8400. I first had a X48 based mobo in mind but now became aware of the new P45 boards. Since its a 65nm chipset it is said to consume less power compared to the X38/X48 based boards (90nm), which I find very interesting. Besides, the P45 are noticeable cheaper than the X48 boards.

Therefore I'd like to know if somebody here has already some experience with the P45 boards. Are they working with Linux, any known problems? What about the new Intel ICH10R chipset and TPM- is it just the usual (*NIX-user) paranoia or should the topic be considered more serious?

Michael
06-29-2008, 03:42 PM
I have a few P45 boards sitting on my pile of new stuff to test... Should have some results soon.

Janusz11
06-29-2008, 05:59 PM
Thanks alot Michael!

mahuyar
07-09-2008, 12:03 PM
Any news on the Intel chipsets P45 and ICH10R? Should we be expecting reviews of those in the following week? Thanks.

Kano
07-09-2008, 06:17 PM
I don't think you will see many changes compared to X48 boards. Basically P45 has the same specs just cheaper - without official FSB 1600 support, but that can do any Intel chipset since P965.

mahuyar
07-10-2008, 12:40 AM
I don't think you will see many changes compared to X48 boards. Basically P45 has the same specs just cheaper - without official FSB 1600 support, but that can do any Intel chipset since P965.

I was wondering about the chipsets drivers. Will they work just like previous ones?

Kano
07-10-2008, 04:47 AM
For me dmraid support for onboard raid would be interesting, but that is currently not working correctly. Even with patched dmraid it calcs wrong by at least 1 cylinder (when you configure it with Win first). For standard use the IDE controller should not be differnt - it works ether in IDE legacy emulation mode (needed for cdrom in many cases to install) or via AHCI. Both work via standard drivers. The rest is usally not critical.

mlau
07-10-2008, 06:58 AM
I was wondering about the chipsets drivers. Will they work just like previous ones?

Apart from different PCI-IDs, Intel chipsets rarely change their register
interface, so yes, they should work (especially "old" pieces like ahci, smbus, audio)