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There was a time when for the Intel platform, you could choose between motherboards based on chipsets from four or more vendors. With the weakening and discontinuation of chipset development for the Intel platform from the likes of VIA, and SiS, and NVIDIA facing a technical and legal blockade with further development of Intel chipsets with the latest Intel processors having integrated memory controllers and the Quickpath Interconnect system interface, consumer choice is reduced to platform core logic coming only from Intel, while motherboard vendors are able to use additives such as the NVIDIA nForce 200 PCI-Express bridge chip, or even the latest LucidLogix Hydra controller, among additional SATA, SAS and Ethernet controllers, to enhance the motherboards' feature-set beyond what the chipset can provide.
Following NVIDIA making the right noises about the future of its chipset division and development of chipsets that drive Socket LGA-1156 processors, it is becoming increasingly clear that its development has hit a possible legal or technical hurdle. Until those issues are ironed out completely, NVIDIA will not invest in further development of that chipset. In a statement, NVIDIA expressed its official position of its chipset division, and where things stand specific to the products it makes. Speaking of which, NVIDIA's chipset division currently sells chipsets for Intel's FSB-driven processors, AMD's latest processors, and the ION platform, which forms the foundation of a more capable ULPC platform based on the Intel Atom processor.
The statement that pertains to the DMI chipset reads:
Despite facing over three years of competition with ATI (which later formed AMD's own desktop chipset division under the Graphics Products Group), NVIDIA claims to lead AMD quantitatively in sales of chipset for the AMD processor platform. NVIDIA's ION platform, which is gaining in popularity and scoring design wins, is poised for further development.
In spite of impending problems, NVIDIA maintains an optimistic outlook with its chipset division catering to both Intel and AMD processor platforms. "We expect our MCP [chipset] business for both Intel and AMD to be strong well into the future," the statement added.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site
Following NVIDIA making the right noises about the future of its chipset division and development of chipsets that drive Socket LGA-1156 processors, it is becoming increasingly clear that its development has hit a possible legal or technical hurdle. Until those issues are ironed out completely, NVIDIA will not invest in further development of that chipset. In a statement, NVIDIA expressed its official position of its chipset division, and where things stand specific to the products it makes. Speaking of which, NVIDIA's chipset division currently sells chipsets for Intel's FSB-driven processors, AMD's latest processors, and the ION platform, which forms the foundation of a more capable ULPC platform based on the Intel Atom processor.
The statement that pertains to the DMI chipset reads:
As for chipsets that drive Intel's Socket LGA-775 processors, NVIDIA said that it will continue to innovate integrated solutions. The company already has the high-end segment covered with its nForce 700i Series chipsets, while gaining ground on its recently-introduced single-chip chipsets with GeForce 9000 motherboard GPUs. The aforementioned recent report also mentioned development of chipsets with even more powerful integrated graphics, with dedicated memory, and support for DDR3 system memory.We will continue to innovate integrated solutions for Intel's FSB architecture. We firmly believe that this market has a long healthy life ahead. But because of Intel's improper claims to customers and the market that we aren't licensed to the new DMI bus and its unfair business tactics, it is effectively impossible for us to market chipsets for future CPUs. So, until we resolve this matter in court next year, we'll postpone further chipset investments for Intel DMI CPUs.
Despite facing over three years of competition with ATI (which later formed AMD's own desktop chipset division under the Graphics Products Group), NVIDIA claims to lead AMD quantitatively in sales of chipset for the AMD processor platform. NVIDIA's ION platform, which is gaining in popularity and scoring design wins, is poised for further development.
In spite of impending problems, NVIDIA maintains an optimistic outlook with its chipset division catering to both Intel and AMD processor platforms. "We expect our MCP [chipset] business for both Intel and AMD to be strong well into the future," the statement added.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site
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