VIA's New PT Chipsets 91
TheTechLounge writes "Today VIA is announcing their new PT series of chipsets to the masses. The chipsets that make up the PT series represent the first real alternatives to Intel's chipsets for the Pentium 4 platform and aim to ease the transition to PCI-Express and DDR-II. All of VIA's PT products are covered under a ten-year cross license agreement between VIA and Intel. As expected, the majority of motherboard manufacturers will be using the PT chipsets in upcoming boards. Some of these companies include Abit, Asus, Chaintech, Biostar, DFI, EPoX, Gigabyte, MSI and Soltek. The PT chipsets cover a wide range of PCI-Express, AGP and IGP solutions for the Intel platform. VIA's new PT chipsets include the PT880 Pro, the PT894 and the PT894 Pro."
Yeah, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
The fact that they don't mention price until the end and in such a lackluster way it makes it tough for me to get excited about this. I really would like to see a less expensive alternative to Intel, not just "priced competitively".
Plus, the fact that the benchmarks don't show anything too exciting doesn't help either.
But competition is always a good thing, I just wish the only selling point didn't seem like "We aren't Intel".
Re:Yeah, but... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yeah, but... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Yeah, but... (Score:2)
But then, since they are forced to license a lot of their technology from Intel, it may not be feasible for them to offer these things at a price substantially lower than Intel's
Re:Yeah, but... (Score:2)
Yeah, I definately got the same "marketing BS" feeling when reading the "article." Which like I said, makes it even more unattractive since you would think with such an article they could come up with better things to say than it just being comparable to Intel.
Re:Yeah, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Yeah, but... (Score:2)
Via has a serious split personality problem (Score:2)
At least in part
Where not Intel is not a selling point. (Score:5, Insightful)
Intel chip sets tend to be very stable. I have to admit that for a server I was thinking of building I am thinking very hard about an Intel motherboard with an Intel CPU. Unless the VIA is faster or cheaper what is the benefit?
Re:Where not Intel is not a selling point. (Score:2)
Re:Where not Intel is not a selling point. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Where not Intel is not a selling point. (Score:1)
And what's wrong with that? That's exactly the combination that I have in my computer, and it works damn fine. Why does it matter who builds and designs the parts, as long as they work well together?
Re:Where not Intel is not a selling point. (Score:2)
Re:Where not Intel is not a selling point. (Score:2)
Problem being, what if 64bit really takes off in a few years. Then you'd rather settle for an Opteron now.
Re:Where not Intel is not a selling point. (Score:2)
Now for the Asterix server we are thinking about it is a much harder question. For that box stability is so important but at the same time recording calls in speex and tracking them could take a lot of CPU power and RAM. For that box I want triple redundant PS and UPS's and RAID 0+1 with SATA
Re:Where not Intel is not a selling point. (Score:2)
Re:Where not Intel is not a selling point. (Score:2)
Three words: IMC (Score:2)
And historically, the biggest reason for performance differences and various other issues on motherboards, has been the memory controller. That's for example what used to make Intel's chipsets rock, and Via's suck, or why the NForce 2 quickly became _the_ choice for Athlon XP chipsets.
Now that AMD has moved that on the CPU itself, you'll notice that in all benchmarks all motherboards perform the same. (1-2% d
Re:Where not Intel is not a selling point. (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, but... (Score:2)
Let's also not forget VIA's rather dismal history with regards to compatibility, reliability and stability.
Re:Yada Yada... (Score:1)
Via and Intel actually are sorta Linux buddies (Score:2, Informative)
They open up specs for their on-board video stuff, sound, and network drivers.
(the intel gigabyte ethernet cards are top of the line and the PXE support makes them great cluster nics.)
Much better support then what you get from Nvidia or ATI (Nvidia closed source drivers nice, but they are still closed. Also their support for motherboards were especially subpar... until the kernel developers when thru the huge pain of reverse engineering them
Linux-friendly? (Score:4, Interesting)
The next machine I build will have a K8T800 Pro-based mobo, as I trust VIA to make a Linux-friendly chipset more than anyone else.
Re:Linux-friendly? (Score:1, Insightful)
I am kinda glad I did, because motherboard and chip EVERYTHING just works (tm). If only there were an open source graphics card of worth it would be apple-like in it's hardware compatibility, no driver downloads, any distro, just works. Very pleased after the tributlations of a cheapo AMD board before with ba
Re:Linux-friendly? (Score:2)
It probably won't surprise you that Intel's graphics chips seem to be well supported in Linux. Though they won't do if you need anything with any power.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Linux-friendly? (Score:2)
I had one of the earlier via AMD boards, based on KT133 (or something, not exactly sure about the number). It had numerous flaws, one of them was that the realtime clock would jump back and forth under load.
A real dealbreaker as the kernel patch to fix that issue broke other stuff (USB, NFS and other timing related things)
Re:Linux-friendly? (Score:2)
But ever since the KT400 or so, they've been getting better. Their semi-recent Socket A chipsets (KT400, KT400A, KT600, and KT880) are generally considered to be incredibly stable, but with only mediocre speed (not horrible, just mediocre). If you're not a hardcore gamer or if you don't need to do things like 3D rendering, the speed is just fine.
Their socket 754/939 chipsets are even better--they're both incredib
Yay new chipsets! (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Yay new chipsets! (Score:1)
However, the market for these products is going to b
Re:Yay new chipsets! (Score:5, Informative)
Vendors like Dell and IBM stuck with Intel as a result.
Also there was a scam 4 years ago when the athlon boards including defective capacitators that would explode. Most cheaper motherboard makers prefered VIA/AMD solutions due to the cheaper price, also picked the bad capitators. Consumers assumed it was VIAs fault stuck with Intel. A few them made it into Intel boards too including IBM's desktop line but the press was not big to pick that up.
Finally in 2005 many business users are seeing through the BS of the early days and VIA is fine.
VIA is not that bad anymore and nvidia works fine with their boards now.
Re:Yay new chipsets! (Score:5, Interesting)
"The" infamous bug? Believe me, it takes more than one infamous bug to gain a well-deserved reputation as a purveyor of crap.
I hit the one with the Soundblaster 128 + Via motherboard. Turns out Via's PCI was shit, and while the Soundblaster 128 did happen to really whale on the particular way in which it was shit, you could randomly lock the system up (completely unstoppably) with any high PCI load.
Mind you, this isn't their first PCI chipset. PCI had been out for years; we were just starting to see computers coming out that had no ISA connectors at all.
That motherboard, as I recall, also had memory issues.
Almost everything I've owned has been Via because I've been a poor college student or worse, and almost everything I've owned has been crap, except the Asus based computer I have. I bought this cheap laptop with a damned Via chipset, and it is the only laptop (even in the cheap-ass class) that runs so hot it burns you when it is idling. Yup, it's the chipset. I wish to high heaven I could replace it.
"Not Via", after extensive experience, is now my #1 criterion when buying new computers. I don't even care if they've improved; they screwed up so many times over such a long period of time in such stupid ways that it has to be systematic; unless they restructured if they've been "good lately" it's either luck, or simply that you haven't heard of the errors their stuff has yet.
Re:Yay new chipsets! (Score:1)
Re:Yay new chipsets! (Score:1)
USB would occasionally lock solid, and games would occassionally lock solid too, the only time I could rely on it was when I was surfing for pr0n.
Via went onto my 'do not buy' list, but Im thinking of getting their mini-itx stuff in the future.
Im with an nforce2 now, no probs whatsoever.
NVidia vs Via (Score:2)
I thought this year might be void of some good hardware, but a dual core Intel board with sli might be be real in Q205. Nice.
What about chipsets for AMD? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:What about chipsets for AMD? (Score:4, Informative)
I'm no expert, but the nForce4 chipset seems to give AMD owners just about everything they need [hexus.net] anyway.
I could be missing something of course. The VIA article was so full of abbreviations and marketing diagrams I had problems concentrating on what the real news were.
Re:What about chipsets for AMD? (Score:2)
I don't think these agreements will prevent VIA from making chipsets they're already committed to making.
Will it be up to the quality of past VIA chipsets? (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:Will it be up to the quality of past VIA chipse (Score:3, Interesting)
There was a patch that workarounded it but that one broke other things (like NFS support, USB support and other stuff that depends on timing).
I'll stay away from VIA for my linux boxes unless I come across a board that has been timetested long enough under linux to be trusted.
Re:Will it be up to the quality of past VIA chipse (Score:1)
The Tech Report has real numbers (Score:5, Informative)
Market? (Score:5, Interesting)
Intel has, sadly, been having its own ass handed to it in the high-performance/gaming segment for a year or more, now. No gaming enthusiast with the slightest bit of hardware knowledge, which is apparently the PT's target market, owns a P4 system these days.
Unless this PT chipset is designed to cut costs for resellers like Dell and Gateway with their high-end machines (and I use the term loosely), I don't see it having any impact at all.
Re:Market? (Score:1)
Re:Market? (Score:3, Interesting)
That Intel has been having a rough go in high-perf/gaming is pretty obvious, however, as a gaming enthusiast with some hardware knowledge I can say that I'm still running a 2.7 GHz (533) P4 without problems (and I don't OC). Haven't come across anything I could not play.
I only build a new machine every couple years, but I can say that while many of my pals have built with the newer 800Mhz bus CPUs, they don't really seem to be getting that m
Re:Market? (Score:2)
I probably would not consider buy VIA anyway. For one, their bus mastering in the past has been substandard or non-existent. A lot of people got burned with VIA and other bits of hardware that
Re:Market? (Score:2)
My point was supposed to be about caution wrt accepting certain chipset cofigurations against P4 compatibility and compliance with DDR2 for the purpose of gaming.
My nomenclature got in the way, I guess.
I was also trying to introduce the experience of the half-dozen gamers and sytem builders in my group.
I am not an EE, though I do read spectrum. I, too, have had interesting and unusual problems with VIA chipsets in the past, particularly wrt firmware updates
Re:Market? (Score:2)
Caused me no end of trouble with DMA CD burners. Nothing like having a drive randomly kick back to a slow PIO mode on boot to cause coasters.
Re:Market? (Score:2)
Now I can't comment on the current generation stuff because I haven't used it. I just didn't feel like dealing with the possibility of unstable hardware.
So
Heat reduction? (Score:1, Interesting)
I do recall the VIA chipsets running at much cooler temperatures than it's competitors. Perhaps they are on to something. With everyone jumping onto the SFF bandwagon, their chips could prove to be quite befitting in that area. I myself wouldn't mind seeing a 2 GHz processor that doesn't need a
Re:Heat reduction? (Score:1)
Disregard the ignorance of my last comment. Mod down to 0, off topic and stupid.
Re:Heat reduction? (Score:1)
MOD PARENT DOWN ALREADY! Hurry, I don't want to risk embarassment on Slashdot. My reputation all over will be ruined!
Re:Heat reduction? (Score:1)
The world of PT (Score:1)
Doesn't anyone at VIA stop and think for a second before deciding on some name for a new product? I own a Taurus PT911 semi-automatic pistol [gunrush.com] for personal protection and in that particular case the name is kind of cool because I get to joke about pitying the fool who dares attack me, not having to call 911 and stuff, but to name a chipset PT is just lame. Chrysler is no better with their Chrysler PT Cruiser [chrysler.com]. Imagine some guy asking a girl: "Hey, wanna go for a ride in my pity cruiser?" What were they thinkin
Other outlets for coverage (Score:3, Informative)
viperlair.com [viperlair.com]
hardocp.com [hardocp.com]
techreport.com [techreport.com]
thetechzone.com [thetechzone.com]
tweaktown.com [tweaktown.com]
thetechzone.com [thetechzone.com]
hothardware.com [hothardware.com]
hexus.net [hexus.net]
pcper.com [pcper.com]
legionhardware.com [legionhardware.com]
thetechlounge.com [thetechlounge.com]
bigbruin.com [bigbruin.com]
Interior Gateway Protocol? (Score:2)
Honestly, I DID do a search on IGP: you can find it here: http://www.google.com/search?&q=define%3Aigp [google.com]. I think I speak for a lot of us when I say, "Please stop assuming everyone in the world knows what the latest acronym du'jour stands for!"
-theGreater.
PS: After doing some addtional subtractive googles, it means "Integrated Graphics ()Pr
Re:Interior Gateway Protocol? (Score:2)
There is no real requirement for acronyms to mean anything. They dont even have to be unique. Any set of three letters will do. Think how many organizations like to be CDC!
Re:Interior Gateway Protocol? (Score:1)
Great (Score:2)
Now you can have PCI lockups and DMA errors many times faster with VIA PCI Express!
VIA Chipsets.. (Score:2)
Re:VIA Chipsets.. (Score:2)
If forced to buy Intel's grossly inefficient P4 blast furnace, though
Better colours (Score:1, Interesting)
Better bus handling? (Score:4, Informative)
When trying to figure out why, I ended up trying a third party (DFI) IDE board to see if that would resolve the issue. It did not, which suggests that the problem is actually with something at the motherboard on the Via Chipset. I ultimately decided to move to NForce2 boards for my video work.
I would hop that these issues have been addressed with the new Via chipsets, but I think it would be worthwhile to run some extended testing before you can't return any board with the chipset on it.
-Rusty
Re:Better bus handling? (Score:1)
Port Multipliers and RAID? (Score:2)
Via reminds me (Score:3, Interesting)
Via is a no buy criterion for me everytime I see something from Via I try too look for other options. Last time that was, was a few weeks ago, when I ditched my long term plans of waiting for Via to bring out a decent C3 combo and went for a Mac Mini purchase for my silent server needs.
Re:Via reminds me (Score:1)
Re:Via reminds me (Score:2)
Oafish Misinterpretation (Score:2)
I thought for a moment that the Pope might be giving some competition to the unholy trinity of Gates, Barret, and Dell.
Oh well, maybe after some white smoke clears...
Anandtech coverage (Score:2)