prideapalon

Amd 780g Chipset Driver

Contents • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Development history [ ] The existence of the chipsets was proven in October 2006 through two hardware websites in Chile and Spain which posted the leaked slides of an ATI internal event, 'ATI chipset update'. In the slides, ATI has shown a series of RD700 series chipset logics codenamed RD790, RX790, RS780 and RS740 respectively. A SB700 was also mentioned in the event. Hexeditor Xvi32 here. The 790X (codename RD780) chipset was spotted in Computex 2007, exhibited. The RS780D was first reported by HKEPC while the RX780H was first seen on ECS internal presentations. After the acquisition of ATI Technologies, AMD started to participate in the development of the chipset series. And as a result, the first performance and enthusiast segment chipsets products under the AMD brand, the 790FX, 790X and 770 chipsets were launched on November 19, 2007 as part of the Spider codenamed desktop performance platform. Origin Queue.

The 780 chipset series, first launched in on January 23, 2008, and released worldwide on March 5, 2008 during 2008, mobile chipsets (M740G, M780G and M780T chipsets) were released on June 4, 2008 during 2008 as part of the and the 790GX chipset was released on August 6, 2008, while some other members released at a later date in 2008. The 785G was announced on August 4, 2009. Line-up [ ] 790FX [ ]. This article needs to be updated. Please update this section to reflect recent events or newly available information. (November 2010) • Codenamed RD790, final name revealed to be 'AMD 790FX chipset' • single AMD processor configuration • Four physical PCIe 2.0 x16 slots @ x8 or two physical PCIe 2.0 x16 slots, one PCIe 2.0 x4 slot and two PCIe 2.0 x1 slots, the chipset provides a total of 38 PCIe 2.0 lanes and 4 PCIe 1.1 for A-Link Express II solely in the Northbridge • 3.0 with support for slots and 2.0 • • • • • 65 nm fabrication process manufactured by • Extreme overclocking, reported to have achieved about 420 MHz bus for overclocking an processor, from originally 200 MHz. Dresden Files Book 16. • Optional discrete chipset cache memory of at least 16 KB to reduce latencies and increase bandwidth • Supports Dual, and teaming option • Reference board codenamed ' Wahoo' for dual-processor system reference design board with three physical PCI-E x16 slots, and ' HammerHead' for single-socket system reference design board with four physical PCI-E x16 slots, also notable was the reference boards includes two ports and only four 3.0 Gbit/s ports (as being paired with SB600 southbridge).

AMD Driver Autodetect