This morning at CeBIT, ASUS took the motherboard spotlight
again with the announcement of its dual-socket, LGA 1366, Z8NA-D6 enthusiast desktop motherboard.
Quickly titled the "first dual-processor ATX motherboard," this makes
an interesting solution for the aging dual-socket LGA 771 Skulltrail desktop platform
of yesteryear.
The board ultimately begins the generation of Intel's
Nehalem-EP (Efficient Platform), which consists of dual Xeon 'Gainestown' CPUs
and two QPI links per chip. One link communicates with the Tylersburg chipset
while the other link communicates with the second processor, both at 25.6GB/s
bidirectional bandwidth.
Because the Nehalem platform also consists of Simultaneous
MultiThreading support, this desktop board is capable of running no less than
16 virtual cores on two of Intel's new Xeon 5500-series CPUs.
Additional specs of the board include 14 SATA ports, one
PCI-E x16 slot, two PCI-E x8 slots, and six DDR3 memory slots capable of up to 24GB
with unbuffered DIMMs and 48GB with registered DIMM modules. Moreover, power is
drawn using a 24 + 8 pin connector supporting both desktop ATX and server SSI power supplies.
Pricing and availability information have not been released
yet, but we can probably expect a release around the end of this month to
coincide with Intel's Xeon 5500-series CPU launch on March 28th.
On a side note, are we the only ones who notice that the label reads "ATX From Factor"?
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ASUS unveils dual-socket LGA 1366 'Gainestown' motherboard

Cebit 2009: Nehalem-EP, Skulltrail replacement