Will the i7-4820K work in the x79 board,s

scott71_70

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my friend has a asus x79 motherboard whit a i7 3820 he wants to upgrade later when the new i7-4820K, comes out can he use his same motherboard thanks
 

scott71_70

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yes the i7 4820K is coming out in July socket 2011 but on some other site,s it was saying there coming out whit a x79A socket 2011 but dint know if the i7 4820K would work on x79 an replace the i7 3820 there now whit out getting a new board it should work same socket 2011 one,s SB the other is IVY B , On the mother board site it says that this asus board will be able to use pcie 3.0 whit new upcoming cpu but not whit SB . it would be nice to know I have a I7 3930k an if the new ive it works on my board il go for the i7 4970k thanks
 

scott71_70

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Haswell is coming out in June socket 1150 not the same as the one im talking about the Haswell i7 4770k looks not bad in lot of case.s the i7 3770k beats the new Haswell i7 4770k but the socket 2011 i7 3970k beats them both more head room you can run ram up to 128gb more speed ,the upcoming i7 4970k works even faster the use of pcie3.0 thanks
 
You do know that SB-E can use PCIe in some cases right?

Not sure where you got the idea that the 4770K is slower than the 3770K.

Also, a quick google shows that IB-E is turning up in September; it's Haswell that's this June.

The 3970K also costs four times as much as a _770K.

Plus I can't find anything about a 4970X, only 4960X.

I expect that the "go for the 4930K; 95% performance at 1/2 the price" mantra is going to continue.
 

scott71_70

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Intel Ivy Bridge-E – 2013′s HEDT Processor
CPUWorld got some information about the features Intel’s new HEDT processors would support. Intel’s Ivy Bridge-E would be codenamed as the Ivy Bridge-E i7-4900 series CPU’s and would be showcased at Computex 2013. The Ivy Bridge-E Processors would be based on the 22nm technology with four to six core models ranging in clock frequencies. Taking in account, 10-12 cores on the Ivy Bridge-EP models this is a bit unimpressive at first but some enhancements would be carried over from those to Ivy Bridge-E processors.

Ivy Bridge-E Processors would support 15 MB L3 cache on the top model which is the same as Sandy Bridge-E. Both Hexa-Core and Quad Core parts would have a 130W TDP with technologies such as Hyper-Threading,
Turbo Core, VT-x and VT-d virtualization available at users hand. The new instruction set would include SSE4, AES , AVX, Float 16.

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The Ivy Bridge-E Processors would have a Quad Channel memory controller and can support 8 GB of DDR3-1066/1333/1600/1866 per DIMM slot. PCI-e 3.0 would also be supported by the new processors churning out 40 lanes and four lanes for PCI-e 2.0. All Ivy Bridge processors would stay loyal to the LGA 2011 socket (X79 Chipset) motherboards. Possible SKU codenames are mentioned below:

Core i7-4930
Core i7-4960
Core i7-4970
Core i7-4990
Once again, the launch would be carried out in third quarter of 2013 whereas these would be showcased early in Computex 2012.
 

scott71_70

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Yet another Intel roadmap has leaked onto the web. This one should please the more enthusiast users alright. There are two main upcoming product launches, with the more interesting one being the 4th generation Ivy Bridge-E CPUs for its HEDT platform, slated for Q3 2013 Legit reviews reports: These will bring all the improvements found in the current Ivy Bridge CPUs such as 22nm Tri-Gate transistors and greater overall efficiency and performance to Intel's premium enthusiast platform. IB-E will feature 6-12 cores (IB-E/EP) large amounts of cache, quad channel memory controllers supporting 8 GB of DDR3-1066/1333/1600/1866 per DIMM slot, along with PCI-E 3.0 (40 lanes) and 4 lanes supporting PCI-E 2.0. It's believed that four CPUs will be launched, bearing the following names: Core i7-4930, Core i7-4960, Core i7-4970 and Core i7-4990.

The CPUs will be compatible with the Socket LGA 2011 and X79 chipset platform and while the clock speeds and TDP aren't known, the TDP is expected to be around the current Sandy Bridge-E level. One can only hope that the inferior heatspreader that current Ivy Bridge CPUs are saddled with causing them to run hotter and significantly reducing overclocking ability will be replaced for the extreme enthusiast grade IB-E CPUs by the superior soldered one found on the earlier Sandy Bridge CPUs. It would be a slap in the face to customers paying so much money for a premium product otherwise.

The other product launch will be better versions of the current Sandy Bridge-E chips, slated for Q2 2013. These are expected to feature higher clock speeds, but the most interesting part will be the first 8 core consumer CPU from Intel, the Core i7-3980X Extreme Edition. Expect to pay dearly for it.