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Hyper-threading is an Intel® technology. While I would guess that it is possible for it to be licensed to them.

There are no AMD motherboards that support PCIe 3.0 right now. However, any There are no AMD motherboards that support PCIe 3.0 right now. can use a PCIe 3.0 graphics card because PCIe is backwards compatible with PCIe 2.0. I would suggest you look at motherboards based on the 970, 990X and 990FX Chipsets.

Hope this helps i just did a Google search and found a lot about it took about 3 mins also not trying to be a grammar nazi but it should be DOES amd Have im sure it was just a typo but i wanted to point it out i to don't have perfect grammar.

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Hyper-threading is an Intel® technology. While I would guess that it is possible for it to be licensed to them. There are no AMD motherboards that support PCIe 3.0 right now. However' date=' any [/size']There are no AMD motherboards that support PCIe 3.0 right now. can use a PCIe 3.0 graphics card because PCIe is backwards compatible with PCIe 2.0. I would suggest you look at motherboards based on the 970, 990X and 990FX Chipsets. Hope this helps i just did a Google search and found a lot about it took about 3 mins also not trying to be a grammar nazi but it should be DOES amd Have im sure it was just a typo but i wanted to point it out i to don't have perfect grammar.

.techpowerup.com/178545/ASUS-Unveils-World-s-First-PCI-Express-3.0-Motherboard-for-AMD-Processors[/url=http://www.techpowerup.com/178545/ASUS-Unveils-World-s-First-PCI-Express-3.0-Motherboard-for-AMD-Processors.html]

also, pcie 3.0 is worthless. you do not hit any bandwidth bottleneck at pcie 2.0 even with 2 7970's in xfire. you just don't see a tangible difference. and pcie 1.0 doesn't bottleneck the same setup either.

the only time you'd see a bottleneck is POSSIBLY when you're running 4 titans in sli running pcie 1.0 4x4x4x4x (but i'm pretty sure that doesn't exist though so :/)

amd has hypertransport, which is a similar technology to hyperthreading.

hypertransport is like hyperthreading, except it is on the bus itself, and not held within the cpu. thats in laymans terms. in a more thorough explanation i'd say that Hyperthreading is a technology which allows the computer to be working on more than one program (called a thread) at the same time. This differs from the traditional concept of "multi-tasking" because of the following: whereas in a multi-tasking operating system (Windows, Linux, etc.) it appears that multiple programs are running at the same time, they're really not. What's happening is the computer is working on one program for 1/1,000th of a second, then it switches to another and runs it for 1/1,000th of a second, then it switches to the third, etc. So, typically only a few dozen programs are running so each of them receive a large amount of the timeslice per unit time. That makes it appear like they're all running at the same time.

and that HyperTransport is a bus technology. It is used to transfer data from a chip to other chips or other parts on the motherboard. HyperTransport is multi-ported, meaning that it can be operating several buses simultaneously at full bandwidth.

so again, the big difference is that one uses its technology in the processor, and the other in the bus itself.

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Hyper-threading is an Intel® technology. While I would guess that it is possible for it to be licensed to them.

There are no AMD motherboards that support PCIe 3.0 right now. However, any There are no AMD motherboards that support PCIe 3.0 right now. can use a PCIe 3.0 graphics card because PCIe is backwards compatible with PCIe 2.0. I would suggest you look at motherboards based on the 970, 990X and 990FX Chipsets.

Hope this helps i just did a Google search and found a lot about it took about 3 mins also not trying to be a grammar nazi but it should be DOES amd Have im sure it was just a typo but i wanted to point it out i to don't have perfect grammar.

Do AMD motherboard useable for corsair vengeance c9 ?
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Hyper-threading is an Intel® technology. While I would guess that it is possible for it to be licensed to them. There are no AMD motherboards that support PCIe 3.0 right now. However' date=' any [/size']There are no AMD motherboards that support PCIe 3.0 right now. can use a PCIe 3.0 graphics card because PCIe is backwards compatible with PCIe 2.0. I would suggest you look at motherboards based on the 970, 990X and 990FX Chipsets. Hope this helps i just did a Google search and found a lot about it took about 3 mins also not trying to be a grammar nazi but it should be DOES amd Have im sure it was just a typo but i wanted to point it out i to don't have perfect grammar.

.techpowerup.com/178545/ASUS-Unveils-World-s-First-PCI-Express-3.0-Motherboard-for-AMD-Processors[/url=http://www.techpowerup.com/178545/ASUS-Unveils-World-s-First-PCI-Express-3.0-Motherboard-for-AMD-Processors.html]

also, pcie 3.0 is worthless. you do not hit any bandwidth bottleneck at pcie 2.0 even with 2 7970's in xfire. you just don't see a tangible difference. and pcie 1.0 doesn't bottleneck the same setup either.

the only time you'd see a bottleneck is POSSIBLY when you're running 4 titans in sli running pcie 1.0 4x4x4x4x (but i'm pretty sure that doesn't exist though so :/)

amd has hypertransport, which is a similar technology to hyperthreading.

hypertransport is like hyperthreading, except it is on the bus itself, and not held within the cpu. thats in laymans terms. in a more thorough explanation i'd say that Hyperthreading is a technology which allows the computer to be working on more than one program (called a thread) at the same time. This differs from the traditional concept of "multi-tasking" because of the following: whereas in a multi-tasking operating system (Windows, Linux, etc.) it appears that multiple programs are running at the same time, they're really not. What's happening is the computer is working on one program for 1/1,000th of a second, then it switches to another and runs it for 1/1,000th of a second, then it switches to the third, etc. So, typically only a few dozen programs are running so each of them receive a large amount of the timeslice per unit time. That makes it appear like they're all running at the same time.

and that HyperTransport is a bus technology. It is used to transfer data from a chip to other chips or other parts on the motherboard. HyperTransport is multi-ported, meaning that it can be operating several buses simultaneously at full bandwidth.

so again, the big difference is that one uses its technology in the processor, and the other in the bus itself.

Do AMD motherboard useable for corsair vengeance c9?
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Hyper-threading is an Intel® technology. While I would guess that it is possible for it to be licensed to them.

There are no AMD motherboards that support PCIe 3.0 right now. However, any There are no AMD motherboards that support PCIe 3.0 right now. can use a PCIe 3.0 graphics card because PCIe is backwards compatible with PCIe 2.0. I would suggest you look at motherboards based on the 970, 990X and 990FX Chipsets.

Hope this helps i just did a Google search and found a lot about it took about 3 mins also not trying to be a grammar nazi but it should be DOES amd Have im sure it was just a typo but i wanted to point it out i to don't have perfect grammar.

If your mother board supports ddr3 ram then yes.

i5 3570 | MSI GD-65 Gaming | OCZ Vertex 60gb ssd | WD Green 1TB HDD | NZXT Phantom | TP-Link Wifi card | H100 | 5850


“I snort instant coffee because it’s easier on my nose than cocaine"


 

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Hyper-threading is an Intel® technology. While I would guess that it is possible for it to be licensed to them. There are no AMD motherboards that support PCIe 3.0 right now. However' date=' any [/size']There are no AMD motherboards that support PCIe 3.0 right now. can use a PCIe 3.0 graphics card because PCIe is backwards compatible with PCIe 2.0. I would suggest you look at motherboards based on the 970, 990X and 990FX Chipsets. Hope this helps i just did a Google search and found a lot about it took about 3 mins also not trying to be a grammar nazi but it should be DOES amd Have im sure it was just a typo but i wanted to point it out i to don't have perfect grammar.

.techpowerup.com/178545/ASUS-Unveils-World-s-First-PCI-Express-3.0-Motherboard-for-AMD-Processors[/url=http://www.techpowerup.com/178545/ASUS-Unveils-World-s-First-PCI-Express-3.0-Motherboard-for-AMD-Processors.html]

also, pcie 3.0 is worthless. you do not hit any bandwidth bottleneck at pcie 2.0 even with 2 7970's in xfire. you just don't see a tangible difference. and pcie 1.0 doesn't bottleneck the same setup either.

the only time you'd see a bottleneck is POSSIBLY when you're running 4 titans in sli running pcie 1.0 4x4x4x4x (but i'm pretty sure that doesn't exist though so :/)

amd has hypertransport, which is a similar technology to hyperthreading.

hypertransport is like hyperthreading, except it is on the bus itself, and not held within the cpu. thats in laymans terms. in a more thorough explanation i'd say that Hyperthreading is a technology which allows the computer to be working on more than one program (called a thread) at the same time. This differs from the traditional concept of "multi-tasking" because of the following: whereas in a multi-tasking operating system (Windows, Linux, etc.) it appears that multiple programs are running at the same time, they're really not. What's happening is the computer is working on one program for 1/1,000th of a second, then it switches to another and runs it for 1/1,000th of a second, then it switches to the third, etc. So, typically only a few dozen programs are running so each of them receive a large amount of the timeslice per unit time. That makes it appear like they're all running at the same time.

and that HyperTransport is a bus technology. It is used to transfer data from a chip to other chips or other parts on the motherboard. HyperTransport is multi-ported, meaning that it can be operating several buses simultaneously at full bandwidth.

so again, the big difference is that one uses its technology in the processor, and the other in the bus itself.

yes

export PS1='\[\033[1;30m\]┌╼ \[\033[1;32m\]\u@\h\[\033[1;30m\] ╾╼ \[\033[0;34m\]\w\[\033[0;36m\]\n\[\033[1;30m\]└╼ \[\033[1;37m\]'


"All your threads are belong to /dev/null"


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to find memory support of a motherboard, you'll need to look to the manufacturer.

if you are speaking of the vengeance 1600, yes most if not all 890/990 should run

it, but you'll more than likely have to set it up in the UEFI BIOS as most default to

1333MHz.

airdeano

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