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Intel Squeezes Six-core Processor Into 65 Watt Power Envelope

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anyone know the release date for these "taking from toms hardware guide";

San Francisco (CA) - Intel is currently preparing the launch of its final Core-architecture processor design, the six-core server CPU Dunnington. Sources indicate that Intel was able to create product versions for all major power envelope levels in this segment, including a low-power 65 watt chip: Six cores and 65 watts sounds like a winner to us.
If there were still any doubts that over the scalability of the Core architecture, Dunnington should put any of those to rest. Like the quad-core Harpertown design, the multi-socket Dunnington will be targeting all three major server segments, covering the 130 watt, 95 watt and 65 watt power envelopes.
Considering that some Harpertown CPUs were rated at a 150 watt power envelope recently (updated to a 120 watt rating last week) and the fact that the 45 nm Dunnington will add two more cores, 9 MB L2 cache and a massive 16 MB L3 cache, the power achievement is impressive by any standard.
The Dunnington flagship, the X7460 model, will run at 2.66 GHz and will carry a thermal design power of 130 watt. The 65 watt version, which could become a major hit in blade-server designs will be clocked at 1.83 GHz. All Dunnington processors will be using FSB1066.
Our colleagues over at Fudzilla previously AMD recently announced that it will also be offering six-core processor, code-named Istanbul, in the first half of 2009. The socket F processor will feature a dual-die design and according to AMD, debut a lower clock speeds than the company’s quad-core processors. A monolithic AMD six-core processor based on a new micro-architecture is expected to be available in 2010.
 
AMD recently announced that it will also be offering six-core processor, code-named Istanbul, in the first half of 2009. The socket F processor will feature a dual-die design and according to AMD, debut a lower clock speeds than the company’s quad-core processors. A monolithic AMD six-core processor based on a new micro-architecture is expected to be available in 2010.

oooh. funny how the tides turn lol.
 
not for the market they're actually aimed at though, these things ain't for desktops are they..

servers or folders will love them!
 
great even more core's to sit idle with
Not aimed at n00bs who think they need a quad core to browse the internet, msn, download and listen to music at the same time.

It's aimed at servers and if that doesn't put you off, then the quite simply amazing price tag will.
 
If there were still any doubts that over the scalability of the Core architecture, Dunnington should put any of those to rest.

Thats not scaling that's just a neat trick with a soldering Iron.
All it takes to make a 12 core cpu is solder 3 quad cores together on a big silicon pcb, design a custom slot for it that basically emulates a Quad cpu server board and away you go. Just watch out for the heat.

65w for 6 cores is good... but still no onboard memory controller and thats the thing that's going to get trashed. We already knew even the extreme quad cores we're squeezing in under 65w so it's good... but not great.
 
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