Originally posted by: humey
1st Peter, i didnt say you said fsb, i just included the info.
2nd Yes sure 940 is still around and for sale but its being replaced on desktops you now get 939 FX's not 940
3rd I dont give a toss what your job is ive heard it all before, im a engineer and it dont mean all i worked with were good or knew wtf they were doing.
One of my buddies in my irc channel that works together with MS on beta stuff used to work with AMD (fixed machines that made wafers), so i dont need you or any others apart from him to edu me on the tech, i take his word over anyone elses.
He seems to know whats going on well into 2007 and all he has said in past is now real so i dont doubt him.
If you so clued up on mobos you should have known 940 pin is being phased out and all FX's now are 939pins and use normal ram.
940 has never been intended for desktop. It's alive and doing extremely well in its intended segment, servers, blades, workstations. ECC RAM is highly welcome and even a must there, "registered" DIMM tech is required for high chip count, thus letting 940-pin CPUs drive four times as much RAM as "unbuffered" 939. Speed doesn't always matter the most ...
Sure, the 940-pin FX chips for high end enthusiast gaming were just a stopgap until 939 was ready. No news there.
754 isn't dead either, in fact, this is what the big OEMs are shifting into the budget PC market in massive quantities, and it's the ONLY platform for AMD notebooks. So we got mobile Semprons, Athlons and Turions, and desktop Athlon and Sempron processors. So the "Athlon" brand is phasing out on this socket, but Turion and 64-bit enabled E6 step Semprons keep 64-bit support on this platform alive. Dead? AMD doesn't think so. But of course, you're the expert.
Others have already commented on your general attitude, so I'll spare myself from repeating what they said.