The Socket G3, originally as part of the codenamed Piranha server platform,[2] was supposed to be the intermediate successor to Socket F and Socket F+ to be used in AMD Opteron processor for dual-processor (2P) and above server platforms scheduled to be launched 2009. The Socket G3 would have been accompanied by the Socket G3 Memory Extender (Socket G3MX), for connecting large amounts of memory to a single microprocessor by a G3MX chip placed on the motherboard.
Type | LGA |
---|---|
Contacts | 1305[1] |
FSB protocol | ? |
FSB frequency | 200 MHz System clock max 2.6 GHz HyperTransport 3.0 |
Voltage range | ? |
Processors | N/A (never released) |
This article is part of the CPU socket series |
AMD had planned socket G3 to arrive with the advent of the previously planned 8-core MCM chip code named Montreal. Since Q1 2008, the plan for and 8-core MCM server chip based on 45 nm K10.5 design has been scrapped in favor of a 6-core fully integrated MPU design code named Istanbul, which would use the existing socket F/F+ platform, produced by Nvidia, Broadcom, as well as Fiorano to be introduced by AMD in 2009.
However, socket G3 was officially discontinued as of March 2008. The socket that was the successor to the Socket F is the LGA 1974-pin Socket G34.[3]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ PCWatch Socket G34 diagram
- ^ AMD Financial Analyst Day presentation Archived February 9, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, presented by Mario Rivas, page 21 of 28. Retrieved December 14, 2007
- ^ "AnandTech: "Hello AMD Socket G34," Retrieved July 21st, 2008". Archived from the original on 2012-05-22. Retrieved 2008-07-21.
External links
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