It's approaching the end of the year for Intel and we were able to get our hands on the latest chipset roadmap. It gives us a good idea of where Intel will be headed in 2006 and beyond. Chipsets were broken down into four main categories: value, mainstream (business/stable), mainstream (consumer) and performance. Although not all categories will be receiving an update between now and the 2nd quarter of 2006, there are quite a few new parts.
Starting at the low-end, Intel shows no changes for their value chipsets. 865GV and 910GL/915G(L/V) variants will remain consistent well into the 2nd half of 2006 with no updates between now and then. This remains typical of value products on past Intel roadmaps.
Current and late '05 generation Intel Chipsets |
|||
975X |
955X |
945PL |
945GZ (coming Q1, 2006) |
1066/800MHz FSB |
1066/800MHz FSB |
800/533MHz FSB |
800/533MHz FSB |
Dual DDR2-667/533MHz |
Dual DDR2-667/533MHz |
Dual DDR2-533/400MHz |
Dual DDR2-533/400MHz |
8GB w/ ECC support |
8GB w/ ECC support |
1 DIMM / Ch (2GB Max) |
1 DIMM / Ch (2GB Max) |
Flexible PCIe Configs |
PCI Express x16 |
PCI Express x16 |
|
Intel Memory Pipeline Technology |
Intel Memory Pipeline Technology |
|
|
|
Includes 945P technology |
|
|
|
|
|
Intel GMA 950 Graphics |
|
ICH7, ICH7R |
ICH7, ICH7R |
ICH7, ICH7R |
|
Intel HD Audio |
|
|
Current generation business or Stable Image Platform Program (SIPP) chipsets are carried forward by Intel's 945 chipset, which also will be used in the majority of the mainstream consumer products into Q2 of 2006. Flavors will include the current 945G, 945P and 945PL (no high definition audio). For those that have been following the transition for Apple onto an Intel platform, Intel's 945G will be familiar. Rumors circulating about Intel dumping 945G are true, and by the end of this year we will see the last of these chipsets with integrated graphics until Q2 of 2006. Intel will be introducing a 945GZ chipset in Q1 of 2006 with integrated graphics, but it will not support discrete graphics add-in cards. 945GZ will contain the same Intel GMA 950 integrated graphics core as 945G.
It's somewhat interesting that Intel includes mainstream-for-business chipsets as SIPP options, but most of the other chipsets do not receive such a distinction. Intel's large corporate buyers that produce B2B systems require guaranteed stability, support, and availability from Intel. SIPP components are guaranteed not to be phased out for at least 18 months after launch. Intel has also begun referring to SIPP configurations as "Stable Image Technology."
On the top end of the scale, Intel is migrating everyone to its 975X chipset from the currently available 955X, with the transitional period lasting roughly 6 months. An important piece of information to keep in mind is that 975X is the only current performance chipset to support Extreme Edition processors and will continue to be the only chipset to do so through to the 2H of 2006 -- clearly the demand for Extreme Edition processors are not very high.
2006 generation Intel Chipsets |
|||
G965 |
P965 |
Q965 |
Q963 |
1066/800/533MHz FSB |
1066/800/533MHz FSB |
1066/800/533MHz FSB |
1066/800/533MHz FSB |
Dual DDR2-800/667/533MHz |
Dual DDR2-800/667/533MHz |
Dual DDR2-800/667/533MHz |
Dual DDR2-667/533MHz |
Intel GMA Graphics |
|
Intel GMA Graphics with dual-head display |
Intel GMA Graphics No Discrete graphics support |
|
|
Stable Image Technology |
Stable Image Technology |
Advanced Media Capability |
|
|
|
ICH8DH |
ICH8DH |
ICH8DO |
ICH8 |
$42 (1ku) launch price |
$38 (1ku) launch price |
$42 (1ku) launch price |
$39 (1ku) launch price |
Coming in Q2 of 2006, Intel will be introducing 4 new chipsets which depart from traditional Intel convention. The first notable change from previous chipsets is the naming convention Intel will be using beginning in Q2, 2006. Letters are now in front of numbers, and with the Q963 Intel has also departed from numbering its chipsets in multiples of 5. We've seen P and G designations with chipsets for a while now, but Q is a new variant.
All of the above chipsets fall into the mainstream market but introduce a significant memory support upgrade across the board. All future chipsets will now support at least 1066/800/533MHz FSB configurations as well as support for 800MHz DDR2 memory -- with the exception of Q963 only being able to support up to 667MHz DDR2. All of the new chipsets will be fully compatible with Intel's next generation ICH8 south bridge, which brings with it a new generation of onboard Ethernet MAC options from Intel (1Gbps).
In terms of pricing, Intel remains consistent with previous chipset launches with current generation chipsets declining in price as the year moves forward. The four new chipsets: G965, P965, Q965 and Q963 are priced at $42, $38, $42, and $39 respectively, in batches of 1000 units. Pricing for Intel's top-end 975X chipset will remain at a hefty $50 into the 2H of 2006 with no change in sight, while other products will drop by $1 to $2.
13 Comments
View All Comments
coldpower27 - Wednesday, December 7, 2005 - link
I am wondering if these will support the new Allendale/Conroe cores coming out in the latter half of 2006?
shabby - Wednesday, December 7, 2005 - link
You'll probably need a new chipset, why release a chipset thats compatible will all cpu's when you can milk the consumer with updated ones.JarredWalton - Wednesday, December 7, 2005 - link
965 isn't planned until 2Q 2006, so it ought to handle the next-gen processors (Conroe/Merom). That may be why the naming style changed as well.