>>
The importance of AGP8X is greater in the mainstream/ GPU solutions** i.e.
1. nVidia's IGP (e.g. the integrated Geforce 4 MX 420 in nForce2 chipset; uses 128bit shared memory architecture).
2. Limited onboard graphic memory e.g Geforce 4 TI 4200 64MB.
**For fleet OEM PCs.
What's that got to do with anything?? I never said AGP 8x wasn't of importance, I even gave links to info on it LOL
>>
I don’t agree with "no FSB" statements.
You don't have to, thats fine. All I said was that speed improvement to HW of this nature has impacted on bandwidth, hence speed in a major way. You want to call it a FSB, go for it. I like memory controller. But whtever.
>>Slightly off topic, with K8, memory controller is upgraded with the CPU.
err.....didn't I just say that? ;-)
>>ASUS nForce3 150 (Socket 940**) supports PC3200 registered ECC RAM via Athlon FX 51. Note that Opteron 146 also supports PC3200 registered ECC RAM.
So??? My Asus kt133 supports IDE raid.

Error Correction Circutry <- great in servers for redundancy, a bit slower, but not too important in this discussion.
>>AMD has stated that motherboard vendors can turn off the on-die memory controller and go for the traditional CPU <> External Northbridge <> Southbridge relationship.
From my personal experience, I have upgraded CPUs more than motherboards i.e. I have unused Athlon Tbird @1.4Ghz**.
Me too, but it's not important. You can have as many memory contollers as you like in the chain, why would you bother?? On die is always going to be quicker and you can't graft more bus lines to a chip once its made, but yes, of course you can. Why would you make it incompatible with current offereings. That's not market smart.
To re design North bridge chips without controller etc and how the communicate with the rest of the moterboards would take lots of resources, designing and testing. What they have done by saying this is that manufacturers will not need to allocate heaps of r&d re-inventing their chip designes just to run with these new CPUs AMD is offering.
>>The PowerMac G4 @1.4Ghz with ATI 9x00 VPU will show you the results of such a setup since it's the closest to the ideal A1XE G4 @1.0Ghz with ATI 9x00 VPU.
Apple are wll known for doing things "their way"
I would like to see another offereing with standard VIA or Nforce like chipset with an AGP3.0 spec.
What's the spec on that PC with regards to chipset and AGP offereing.
My old Pentium 233 has an ATI radion 8500 in it on AGP bus, what's the point?
What you can't design a newer chipset around a G4 CPU now? just cause AMD haven't or Nvidia doesn't mean it can't be done. What your saying that Apple got it right? how old is their mainboard? If there was a more of a market then Asus gigabyte etc would all bring out their flavours.
That doesn't make the G4 a slouch though. The G4 is a very powerful chip and quit easily able to play on a nice fast system bus. Cramp it up on a slow PCI system with SDRAM and a slow memory controller and you will have a slower system. Man it's not rocket science.