Wednesday, December 29th 2010

MSI to Integrate Killer NIC with Motherboards?
MSI announced a partnership with Bigfoot Networks, the company behind the Killer NIC series of accelerated network interface cards (NICs). The immediate results of this would be the motherboard major bundling Killer NICs with some of its high-end motherboards. MSI also hinted that it could work to integrate the Killer NIC logic onto motherboards. Knowing how MSI was the first to be out with a LucidLogix Hydra Engine motherboard, the idea of integration of Killer NIC onto one of its future motherboards doesn't seem far-fetched.
"We are pleased to be working with MSI," said Michael Howse, CEO of Bigfoot Networks. "The Killer 2100 gaming network card is a perfect complement to the MSI Big Bang family of mainboard solutions that will give gamers a competitive edge in online play." Andy Tung, VP of MSI USA says "MSI mainboards with Military Class components provide a great backbone for any gaming system and the Killer 2100 network card is a way to improve performance and get one step ahead of the competition."
Source:
HotHardware
"We are pleased to be working with MSI," said Michael Howse, CEO of Bigfoot Networks. "The Killer 2100 gaming network card is a perfect complement to the MSI Big Bang family of mainboard solutions that will give gamers a competitive edge in online play." Andy Tung, VP of MSI USA says "MSI mainboards with Military Class components provide a great backbone for any gaming system and the Killer 2100 network card is a way to improve performance and get one step ahead of the competition."
49 Comments on MSI to Integrate Killer NIC with Motherboards?
Also the Killer NIC is just a luxury item like a high end sound card. Did you really need it, no. Was the onbound audio chip good enough....yeah. Then why buy a sound card....because good enough is not how you roll. Do you need a dedicated network processor....no. Does it work better than the onbound NIC.....yeah (even if it is only slightly in most situations).
I still would like to see a review done by TPU for one of the new Killer NIC's. Especially with games that tax your CPU while playing online and against BFBC2 latency correction BS. Does it help more offloading the network processing for a Dual core than a Quad? As well as test some of its other claims like being about the download a large file or torrents while game with no performance lose to your game.
This would make sense to me - to compare it with inexpensive NIC add-on card that provides better traffic offloading than MB NIC, along with adding CFosSpeed to the test.
Will REALLY improve LAN speed, no matter, gaming or not - and with not too big price premium, compared with BigFoot solution.
:):toast::)
But will the price increase be justified (same for Big Foot)?
If you have a 4 core CPU, network traffic wont matter :toast:
It processes packets no differently than a router.
And good routers allow you to tweak your QoS settings for specific programs on your network, just like good software.
I've played with Cfos, and it's no better than a good router. It's leagues better than earlier implementations of router based QoS, but not better than the good ones out there now, especially in multiple device situations. You can't compare a NIC to a sound card. The difference between on-board sound and a sound card is DRASTIC, the difference between the Killer NIC and on-board is very minor in comparison.
The same goes for audio.
Hell, Bigfoot Networks should invest in developing a hardware NIC on a chip. If done right, they won't cost much more than current chips and would bring in a whole lot of money through volume if they can make deals with big motherboard manufacturers.
As for it not costing much more than current chips, I can quote you some chip prices for server NICs (which the "Killer" NIC pretty much is, just in a snazzier package) which perform TCP/IP offloading, among other things. These start at around 0.7-1$ for the chip itself for a 1Gbps NIC (often also needed is an external PHY placed on the motherboard) and can reach well over 100$ for the chip alone for a high-end 10Gbps NIC (a whole PCIe card with one of these can run into the several thousands of dollars range).
The $100 price tag comes from rarity/targeting at enterprise customers. Hardware NIC on a chip would need an NPU with IMC and an adequately sized RAM bank directly on the chip. A 64 MiB DDR chip costs, what, $3? All told, the NIC on a chip should cost about $5 each or less (depending on fab) and be capable of 1 Gbps. It is difficult to estimate how much more 10 Gbps would cost. It may actually be about the same price with a difference in clockspeed.
We have the technology to do it but we don't simply because Marvell NICs are "good enough."
The benefits of a sound card over on-board have been proven time and time again thru accuracy testing.
The benefits for an aftermarket NIC vs on-board on a desktop PC have not.
Doesn't matter if you disagree or not.
I also never said a dedicated sound card did not yield benefits. I stated it was a luxury item and largely not a requirement when building a system as the on-board does work good enough for most people. On this point is where I made a comparison between the two.