PC Review


Reply
Thread Tools Rate Thread

Asus A8N-SLI Premium Triggers SLI In Software

 
 
Ed
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      27th Mar 2005
The A8N-SLI Premium is another offering in the Asus line of nForce4
motherboards, and it is designed to simplify SLI handling. The new board
allows the special dual-graphics mode to be enabled or disabled within
the BIOS setup program, or by using a little Asus utility in Windows XP.

http://www20.tomshardware.com/mother...323/index.html

hth,
Ed

 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
Paul
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      27th Mar 2005
In article <(E-Mail Removed)>, Ed
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:

> The A8N-SLI Premium is another offering in the Asus line of nForce4
> motherboards, and it is designed to simplify SLI handling. The new board
> allows the special dual-graphics mode to be enabled or disabled within
> the BIOS setup program, or by using a little Asus utility in Windows XP.
>
> http://www20.tomshardware.com/mother...323/index.html
>
> hth,
> Ed


Hmm. Uses a Pericom part to handle the switching of the PCI
Express lanes (and I cannot find a datasheet for the "P12PCIE").
I like the layout of the copper tracks - no 90 degree corners,
and what could be rounded corners on the signal tracks. That is
due to the high frequencies carried on those diff pairs.
The layout person for that board must have worked a few 12 hour
days to do that.

Cool tech, but is it really necessary ? How often do you
reconfigure graphics cards ?

Paul
 
Reply With Quote
 
Ed
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      27th Mar 2005
On Sun, 27 Mar 2005 14:41:55 -0500, (E-Mail Removed) (Paul) wrote:

>In article <(E-Mail Removed)>, Ed
><(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>
>> The A8N-SLI Premium is another offering in the Asus line of nForce4
>> motherboards, and it is designed to simplify SLI handling. The new board
>> allows the special dual-graphics mode to be enabled or disabled within
>> the BIOS setup program, or by using a little Asus utility in Windows XP.
>>
>> http://www20.tomshardware.com/mother...323/index.html
>>
>> hth,
>> Ed

>
>Hmm. Uses a Pericom part to handle the switching of the PCI
>Express lanes (and I cannot find a datasheet for the "P12PCIE").
>I like the layout of the copper tracks - no 90 degree corners,
>and what could be rounded corners on the signal tracks. That is
>due to the high frequencies carried on those diff pairs.
>The layout person for that board must have worked a few 12 hour
>days to do that.
>
>Cool tech, but is it really necessary ? How often do you
>reconfigure graphics cards ?
>
> Paul


Once every 3 years or so.

Another Asus 1st?
Pentium M to Pentium 4 Socket Adapter
http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets...oc.aspx?i=2382

Ed

 
Reply With Quote
 
Paul
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      27th Mar 2005
In article <(E-Mail Removed)>, Ed
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:

> On Sun, 27 Mar 2005 14:41:55 -0500, (E-Mail Removed) (Paul) wrote:
>
> >In article <(E-Mail Removed)>, Ed
> ><(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
> >
> >> The A8N-SLI Premium is another offering in the Asus line of nForce4
> >> motherboards, and it is designed to simplify SLI handling. The new board
> >> allows the special dual-graphics mode to be enabled or disabled within
> >> the BIOS setup program, or by using a little Asus utility in Windows XP.
> >>
> >> http://www20.tomshardware.com/mother...323/index.html
> >>
> >> hth,
> >> Ed

> >
> >Hmm. Uses a Pericom part to handle the switching of the PCI
> >Express lanes (and I cannot find a datasheet for the "P12PCIE").
> >I like the layout of the copper tracks - no 90 degree corners,
> >and what could be rounded corners on the signal tracks. That is
> >due to the high frequencies carried on those diff pairs.
> >The layout person for that board must have worked a few 12 hour
> >days to do that.
> >
> >Cool tech, but is it really necessary ? How often do you
> >reconfigure graphics cards ?
> >
> > Paul

>
> Once every 3 years or so.
>
> Another Asus 1st?
> Pentium M to Pentium 4 Socket Adapter
> http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets...oc.aspx?i=2382
>
> Ed


It'll make a dandy "summertime" computing solution.
But the performance is a little uneven, and the
processors will have to drop a lot in price, before
I'd be interested.

That is the problem now, with all the different variants
and Intel vs AMD - it is hard to recommend a processor,
without there being a weakness somewhere. Like the
"H.W. Stockman" threads above, he bought a 3800+, but
for his application it is performing more like a 2600.
My P4 2.8C Northwood is slightly faster than his 3800+
It is easy to spend a wad of dough, and get a nasty
surprise.

I think a primo application for the Pentium-M is this
Media Center motherboard. Cool in every respect:

http://club.aopen.com.tw/news/News_S...nguage=English

Paul
 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
Reply

Thread Tools
Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Asus A8N SLI premium Terry DIY PC 3 9th Feb 2008 12:11 AM
Asus A8N-E or A8N-SLI Premium? coolsti DIY PC 5 24th Jul 2006 02:21 AM
Asus SLI Premium =?Utf-8?B?SnVqaGFy?= Windows Vista Hardware 0 5th Jul 2006 06:05 PM
New Opteron 939 ? Will they fit on Asus SLI Premium MB or all 939 Asus MB ? Jean Asus Motherboards 0 7th Nov 2005 03:16 AM
ASUS A8N-SLI Premium GreggC Asus Motherboards 15 9th Jul 2005 10:43 PM


Features
 

Advertising
 

Newsgroups
 


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:52 PM.