Tuesday, March 24th 2009

NVIDIA Preparing New MCP89E Chipset for Centrino 2 Mobile Platforms

The warm market response the NVIDIA MCP79 chipset received - in its numerous forms that is - meant that the company is already developing a product line. The newest one is in the works. Named the MCP89E, the chipset, specifications-wise, is a toned-down version of the MCP79. Perhaps that is what "E" in the model name reflects. The chipset is built to support Intel processors that usually feature as part of the Centrino 2 platform. It has an identical pin-layout to the MCP79, so existing motherboards can accommodate it seamlessly with only a BIOS to change.

The specifications sheet, as sourced by VR-Zone, shows the level to which the MCP89E slims down from that of the MCP79. What exactly makes it a generation ahead (as the "89" in the codename suggests), is the fact that this is one of the first platform chipsets to support the generation-3 SATA interface (SATA III, 600 MB/s). It does away with support for the DDR2 memory standard, and has a toned-down PCI-Express root complex with only 8 PCI-E 2.0 lanes to spare. The IGP features only one DAC in comparison to the MCP79, though its output configuration differs: it supports up to two DisplayPort or HDMI connections. NVIDIA may announce this chipset soon, which will further reduce platform costs and thermal footprints for notebooks.
Source: VR-Zone
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2 Comments on NVIDIA Preparing New MCP89E Chipset for Centrino 2 Mobile Platforms

#1
pedrofdmp
I don't think i will be buying anything from nvidia soon:

- nforce2 dropped driver support too early, crappy memory controller that was hell to get qualified ram
- tnt2/geforce4 ti , i don't expect updated drivers now but it's a nightmare to find the correct drivers that actualy support it, thay are always missing from the inf files have to search drivers one by one to get the right one.
- 8400/8600 fiasco, no one knows for sure if 9xxx series are affected to this day (have seen a desktop part fail) manufacters update fan speed and parts fail out of warranty
- after ati releases specs for building open source drivers ... nvidia goes on with binary drivers
- re branding bullshit

nvidia image doesn't seem so good, nowadays i don't recommend it to anyone i know. How low can they get?!
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#2
Cheeseball
Not a Potato
LOL, you signed up just to bash on NVIDIA? LOL.
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Dec 20th, 2024 02:15 EST change timezone

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