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The thing is, can it run on normal 1155 socket?? If you dont want the ECC ram?
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Well the thing about it that interests me is its performance (assuming the V2 IB version) compared to other processors in the same price/performance range, if your not interested in overclocking it looks like a bargain:
i5 2550K: slower at stock clocks and ~ same price
i7 2600: slower and more expensive
i7 2700K: ~ same performance at stock clocks and more expensive
i5 3550: slower but slightly cheaper
i5 3570K: slightly slower at stock clocks and ~ same price
i7 3770: 100mhz faster and more expensive*
i7 3770K: 200mhz faster at stock clocks and a lot more expensive**
*Would cover the cost of the ram or maybe the motherboard
**would cover the cost of the motherboard and maybe also the ram
Now im going to be replacing a lot of our workstations soon and don't plan on overclocking any hence why this chip interests me as in addition to great price/performance it also runs cooler than any i5/i7 according to the specs.
The thing is, can it run on normal 1155 socket?? If you dont want the ECC ram?
Yeah true, well when I get it ill let you know and try answer any questions you might have.
Yes it runs in a normal 1155 socket.
Interesting thing is, why did they release xeons on 1155 ? I wonder if any dual socket 1155's will become available.
The thing is, its very useful to people who dont need IGP or Overclock, 3770 cost 240quid 1230v2 is 180 they offer similar performance for 60 quid I could buy a GPU that would blow away IGP.
It would still challenge 3570K/2500K since for same price you get 8 threads and for some people who use editing software that might be much more useful.

I generally agree with your comments Dirtyganger, especially the Vt-x, v-pro etc, however the 1st comment about 'its designed and made for an entirely different market', is a load of tosh, every single sandy/ivy bridge ALL come from the same lithoography process, every, single, one.
Dirtyganker, are the Intel specs wrong then? Not trying to pick an argument but had researched the non-K revisions for use in an ESXi box a while back.
You have said that you can't compare K versions which makes sense but the non K 2500/2600 variants do support the features you listed.
I am not sure anyone is suggesting a core chip would be sensible in a server but if quick sync is ignored (I have never used it and have no use of it) then the Xeon would be a great alternative to a 2500 at around the same price would it not due to HT?
I was comparing it against a 3770k when I was looking at the specs but I guess I just assumed the non-K sku's would be similar. However, I stand corrected and what you point out is completely true, which is very interesting. For anyone else interested in taking a look at the comparisons then here's the link :-
http://ark.intel.com/compare/65732,65719,65702,65520,65523
Interesting that the K sku's don't have the enterprise goodies but the locked ones do but I also noticed that the Xeon has 4 additional PCI-E lanes but I don't know how they would be available on something like a Z77 board designed around 16 lanes via the CPU.
We will find out later if its worth it, I have it now in my hands and will install in the server later today.
I did have to buy a £10 graphics card however so I can set up windows etc..... then im planning on removing the graphics card and just running the server with no graphics card and remote desktop to it as I normally do.
Xeon 1230 pretty much makes "non-K" processors look useless, unless you want the IGP which it does not have, but is it worth it?
Well it looks like if you need quicksync for video encoding ... and a lot of ppl do make use of it, particularly if you convert video from one format to another for use on a mobile device ... then Core i5 non-K sku will do the job better than a Xeon as hyperthreading is likely to be less of an asset over quicksync.
According to the benchies the E3-1230-V2 beats both the i5 2500K and i7 2600K in Cinebench and Handbrake tests so it should take the non K ones too, or did you mean a different type of encoding?
According to the benchies the E3-1230-V2 beats both the i5 2500K and i7 2600K in Cinebench and Handbrake tests so it should take the non K ones too, or did you mean a different type of encoding?
I paid for 2700K so I want to make full use of the IGP too... a lot of people say that quicksync makes fast conversion but is it really faster than my 560ti with CUDA enabled??