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    Intel will solder the microchips to the motherboards

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    • cobitoC Desconectado
      cobito Administrador
      Última edición por

      According to what I read here, Intel has decided that in its new generation of processors, it will stop using sockets and these will be soldered to the motherboard, preventing them from being replaced.

      It seems to me a too radical change to give it credibility, but everything is possible.

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      • deeiividD Desconectado
        deeiivid Veteranos HL
        Última edición por

        I think it's not very convenient for them to do that... Many enthusiasts change microprocessors more often than motherboards, if they do it they will lose market share and also annoy people xD

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        • TecnhoT Desconectado
          Tecnho Veteranos HL
          Última edición por

          I see it as very radical as you rightly say cobito and it would seem very strange to me because they would lose a very important market right now, that of enthusiasts like me and many others, then they would have to agree with all the motherboard brands.
          I imagine it would be more focused on low-mid range computers and for OEM equipment from brands if not, it doesn't add up much for me but well if something like this happened with all future processors, AMD would be welcome.

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          FranziskanerF 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
          • FranziskanerF Desconectado
            Franziskaner @Tecnho
            Última edición por

            I find it very strange, it's like going back in time :facepalm:
            at very low ranges and if they are price cuts (I3?) it may be possible, but in the rest of the range ….. I don't think so
            if that's the case, the next thing will be to solder the heatsink to the micro (like many years ago) :ugly:
            regards

            SylverS 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
            • SylverS Desconectado
              Sylver Veteranos HL @Franziskaner
              Última edición por

              I think the same, if anything in basic home equipment or HTPC, maybe… But as the mid-to-high range ones are like this, Intel's blunder will be huge :facepalm:
              Anyway, what a surprise the news is!

              >> i7-2600K Sandy Bridge @4.4GHz || Noctua NH-D14 || ASRock Z77 Extreme4 || 4x8Gb G.Skill Ripjaws X DDR3 1600MHz || XFX RX 5700 XT 8Gb || SSD Samsung 850 PRO 256Gb & 850 EVO 500Gb || WD Caviar Green 1Tb || Barracuda 1Tb || Corsair TX650 V2 || M-Audio Fast Track Pro || KRK RP8 RoKit G3 || BenQ GW2750 27"
              >> Athlon 64 X2 5600+ Brisbane @2.9GHz || Gigabyte GA-M61PME-S2 || 2x2Gb DDR2 Kingston 800MHz || Sapphire Radeon HD 5850 Xtreme 1Gb || Maxtor 320Gb SATA2 || OCZ ModXStream 500W Modular || TEAC PowerMax 120/2 || Acer X243w 24"
              >> Intel Core2Duo E6600 Conroe @2.4GHz || Asus P5N32-SLI SE DELUXE || 2x1Gb DDR2 Kingston 800MHz || Asus nVidia GeForce 9800GT 1Gb GDDR3 || Seagate Barracuda IDE 80Gb 7200RPM || Linkworld LPK12-35 450W

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              • FranziskanerF Desconectado
                Franziskaner @Sylver
                Última edición por

                In the worst/best of cases we will learn to perform micro welding :troll:
                Regards

                cobitoC 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
                • cobitoC Desconectado
                  cobito Administrador @Franziskaner
                  Última edición por

                  I'm with Tecnho. This must be a way to reduce costs in the lower end of the desktop in the same way they already sell Atom boards with the processor soldered.

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                  FranziskanerF Kernel1.0K 2 Respuestas Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
                  • FranziskanerF Desconectado
                    Franziskaner @cobito
                    Última edición por

                    what is still a pipe dream is that the guys at intel stretch and come up with the equivalent of the raspberry pi, just thinking about it makes my mouth water :sisi:
                    regards

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                    • Kernel1.0K Desconectado
                      Kernel1.0 Veteranos HL @cobito
                      Última edición por

                      @cobito:

                      I'm with Tecnho. This must be a way to reduce costs in the lower range of the desktop in the same way they already sell Atom boards with the processor soldered.

                      That's what I was going to say, they already do it with the Atom and it's normal that they continue to do it but in that price/performance range if it doesn't go my***a, imagine a top-of-the-range i7 stuck to a 300 euro board, something breaks and goodbye.:facepalm:

                      _Neptunno__ 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
                      • _Neptunno__ Desconectado
                        _Neptunno_ MODERADOR @Kernel1.0
                        Última edición por

                        Well, my opinion is the same as everyone else's, this will at most be in the low range, or low-mid range. The rest will continue to be a matter of being able to change the motherboard and CPU.
                        Although the constant change in sockets lately... well, what can I say, you almost always end up changing the motherboard when you change the CPU :troll:

                        Another problem would be with RMA, if the motherboard dies, which statistically is more likely to fail than the CPU, it will always be more costly for companies, I think. Because they will have to either demount the CPU and put it back on the new motherboard, or give you one with a new CPU and that's an additional cost.
                        Maybe I'm wrong and it doesn't affect them, but... I find it hard to believe that this doesn't pose an economic problem for motherboard manufacturers.

                        Regards!!

                        kynesK 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
                        • kynesK Desconectado
                          kynes Veteranos HL @_Neptunno_
                          Última edición por

                          My opinion is that we are four cats, Intel makes money in other market segments, and the advantages in them make it possible for them to compensate for the move. Get used to the idea...

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                          cobitoC 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
                          • cobitoC Desconectado
                            cobito Administrador @kynes
                            Última edición por

                            @kynes:

                            My opinion is that we are four cats, intel makes money in other market segments, and the advantages in them make it possible for them to compensate for the move. Get used to the idea...

                            It is also possible. Since tablets have become popular, I think the home desktop PC is doomed to die. I have noticed that the vast majority of PC users can do everything they did with the limited functions of a tablet.

                            The desktop PC will be left only for enthusiasts, gamers, professionals and offices; basically the same ones who used PCs before the Internet boom in the early 2000s.

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                            packosoftP 1 Respuesta Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
                            • packosoftP Desconectado
                              packosoft Admin honoris causa @cobito
                              Última edición por

                              my download PCs have the micro soldered xDDD
                              from what I've read around, they say that using a socket causes limitations when scaling due to the losses produced by the connection between the pins and the micro.
                              Of course I can already see PCs with the 3 red lights or the yellow ring of the moment because the temperatures have caused the solder to fail and come together…

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                              • SylverS Desconectado
                                Sylver Veteranos HL @packosoft
                                Última edición por

                                @packosoft:

                                my download PCs have the micro soldered xDDD
                                from what I've read around, they say that using a socket causes limitations when scaling due to the losses produced by the connection between the pins and the micro.
                                Of course I can already see PCs with the 3 red lights or the yellow ring of the day because the temperatures have caused the solder to fail and come together…

                                Well they are baked like XaviJS's graphics and that's it ?

                                >> i7-2600K Sandy Bridge @4.4GHz || Noctua NH-D14 || ASRock Z77 Extreme4 || 4x8Gb G.Skill Ripjaws X DDR3 1600MHz || XFX RX 5700 XT 8Gb || SSD Samsung 850 PRO 256Gb & 850 EVO 500Gb || WD Caviar Green 1Tb || Barracuda 1Tb || Corsair TX650 V2 || M-Audio Fast Track Pro || KRK RP8 RoKit G3 || BenQ GW2750 27"
                                >> Athlon 64 X2 5600+ Brisbane @2.9GHz || Gigabyte GA-M61PME-S2 || 2x2Gb DDR2 Kingston 800MHz || Sapphire Radeon HD 5850 Xtreme 1Gb || Maxtor 320Gb SATA2 || OCZ ModXStream 500W Modular || TEAC PowerMax 120/2 || Acer X243w 24"
                                >> Intel Core2Duo E6600 Conroe @2.4GHz || Asus P5N32-SLI SE DELUXE || 2x1Gb DDR2 Kingston 800MHz || Asus nVidia GeForce 9800GT 1Gb GDDR3 || Seagate Barracuda IDE 80Gb 7200RPM || Linkworld LPK12-35 450W

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                                • F Desconectado
                                  fjavi @Sylver
                                  Última edición por

                                  It's been a while since the thread, but it seems that Intel will continue to use the LGA socket for a while, the BGA must be for cheaper computers.

                                  Intel will support socket formats in the "foreseeable future"

                                  That is, they will possibly leave only LGA for high-end ranges and BGA for laptops and builder computers, it seems that Haswell could be the last LGA, although they must release something in socket 2011 after Haswell.

                                  regards

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                                  • FalkembergF Desconectado
                                    Falkemberg
                                    Última edición por

                                    mmm but I've read that this was only aimed at computers assembled by assemblers (DELL, HP..etc) and/or equipment sold by intel for companies… that is, for the business sector both large and medium and small businesses... that support would continue to be given to the average user as before but with some types of micro, not all. P.D:....by the way...since 2005 without entering :wall::wall:
                                    deeiividD WargreymonW 2 Respuestas Última respuesta Responder Citar 0
                                    • deeiividD Desconectado
                                      deeiivid Veteranos HL @Falkemberg
                                      Última edición por

                                      @Falkemberg:

                                      mmm but I've read that this was only aimed at computers assembled by assemblers (DELL, HP..etc) and/or equipment sold by intel for companies…that is, for the business sector both large and medium and small businesses...that support would continue to be given to the average user as before but with some types of micro, not all.

                                      P.D:....by the way...since 2005 without entering :wall::wall:

                                      But equally this closes a lot of work for those of us who professionally or to make a little money (like me) dedicate ourselves to repairing computers of that type… Or even to give them a second life in the future.

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                                      • WargreymonW Desconectado
                                        Wargreymon @Falkemberg
                                        Última edición por

                                        They will only be mid and low ranges, which are supposed to be alternatives, that is, the i7 and i5 will continue to be normal LGA or perhaps they will change them to LC-PGA, and the low-end Pentium and i3 will continue to exist normally in LGA (Pins on the Motherboard) or LC-PGA (Pins on the CPU) and also soldered to boards as an alternative. Perhaps this will stop selling mini-ITX boards as they are sold now and will switch to selling almost all with BGA CPU soldered.
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                                        • FalkembergF Desconectado
                                          Falkemberg @deeiivid
                                          Última edición por

                                          @deeiivid:

                                          But equally, this closes a lot of work for those of us who professionally or to make a little money (like me) dedicate ourselves to repairing computers of that type... Or even to give them a second life in the future.

                                          Well yes... but they have done this like the cars.... you can't even change a headlight without dismantling half the car... so only the workshops could repair (with the subsequent economic anger of the normal user).... well, almost the same thing... only the assemblers could repair their equipment... making a profit from it.

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