...I don't think any one saw this coming.
I'm utterly shocked. It's just like...wow.
AJ
I'm duhm. Please spell this out for me.
NVIDIA normally only has their SLI (Scalable Link Interface) on their nForce motherboards. That is so people can put 2 or 3 similar graphics cards in their system to get the most performance out of their systems. Now, they only did this on their boards, and they didn't license the technology out to Intel. Now, they are enabling SLI via BIOS, but the board makers have to get it certified. There had been speculation about no SLI support on the Nehalem processors -- it was a "war" going on. Intel makes its own boards, and NVIDIA made a reference board that they license out to makers like EVGA and Asus to market and produce.
So, NVIDIA licensing the technology is the biggest surprise ever.
AJ
NVIDIA normally only has their SLI (Scalable Link Interface) on their nForce motherboards. That is so people can put 2 or 3 similar graphics cards in their system to get the most performance out of their systems. Now, they only did this on their boards, and they didn't license the technology out to Intel. Now, they are enabling SLI via BIOS, but the board makers have to get it certified. There had been speculation about no SLI support on the Nehalem processors -- it was a "war" going on. Intel makes its own boards, and NVIDIA made a reference board that they license out to makers like EVGA and Asus to market and produce.
So, NVIDIA licensing the technology is the biggest surprise ever.
AJ
Thank you. You filled us "graphics" newbies in on a lot of insider history in one short paragraph.
Sharing is great !!!
davey