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ASUS Maximus IV Extreme


OpenBenchmarking.org Results

Global Results

test2 - Tests on PTS Desktop Live 2010.1, Intel Core 2 Extreme X9000, NVIDIA G84, Dell 0KX412

test1 - Tests on PTS Desktop Live 2010.1, Intel Core 2 Extreme X9000, NVIDIA G84, Dell 0KX412

testhd - Tests on PTS Desktop Live 2010.1, Intel Core 2 Extreme X9770, NVIDIA Device 1244, ASUS STRIKER II EXTREME

T3400 - Tests on Ubuntu 10.04, Intel Core 2 Extreme X9650, NVIDIA G84, Dell 0TP412

ptslive-2540-18451-5946 - Tests on PTS Desktop Live 2010.1, Intel Core 2 Extreme Q9300, NVIDIA Device 061e, Dell 0G841G

Evanscomputers.com-Openssl-2v4 - Tests on Fedora 12, Ubuntu 10.10, Intel Core 2 Extreme X9650, NVIDIA GT200, EVGA 132-YW-E178-FTW, AMD Athlon X2 BE-2350, NVIDIA C68, ASUS M2N-VM DVI

test1 - Tests on PTS Desktop Live 2010.1, Intel Core i7 950, ATI Device 6898, ASUS Rampage III Extreme

AMD vs Intel - Tests on Ubuntu 10.10, Intel Core i7 920, ATI Device 6738, Gigabyte EX58-EXTREME

php run 1 - Tests on Ubuntu 10.10, Intel Core i7 920, ATI Device 6738, Gigabyte EX58-EXTREME

2010-05-08-0028 - Tests on Ubuntu 9.10, RedHatEnterpriseServer 5.4, Intel Core i7 930, GeForce GTX 275, ASUS Rampage II Extreme, QEMU Virtual 0.9.1, Cirrus Logic GD 5446, Red Hat KVM

2010-05-08-0028 - Tests on Ubuntu 9.10, RedHatEnterpriseServer 5.4, Intel Core i7 930, GeForce GTX 275, ASUS Rampage II Extreme, QEMU Virtual 0.9.1, Cirrus Logic GD 5446, Red Hat KVM

2010-05-08-0028 - Tests on Ubuntu 9.10, RedHatEnterpriseServer 5.4, Intel Core i7 930, GeForce GTX 275, ASUS Rampage II Extreme, QEMU Virtual 0.9.1, Cirrus Logic GD 5446, Red Hat KVM

2010-05-08-0028 - Tests on Ubuntu 9.10, RedHatEnterpriseServer 5.4, Intel Core i7 930, GeForce GTX 275, ASUS Rampage II Extreme, QEMU Virtual 0.9.1, Cirrus Logic GD 5446, Red Hat KVM

Evanscomputers.com-blogbench - Tests on Fedora 13, Intel Core 2 Extreme X9650, NVIDIA G92, EVGA 132-YW-E178-FTW, Intel Core i5 660, GeForce GTX 260, ASUS P7H55-M PRO

Phoronix Information

Phoenix Strikes HyperSpace Deal With ASUS: ASUS was the first company to ship SplashTop, an embedded instant-on Linux environment, on any of its products. They began by offering SplashTop on select ASUS motherboards, then it turned into ASUS notebooks, and then to many more ASUS products. However, Phoenix Technologies has now wooed ASUS into shipping HyperSpace on their notebooks...

ASUS Releases Eee PC 901, 1000, 1000H: This morning ASUS has announced the expansion of their Eee PC family with the introduction of three new models. These three new models use Intel's Atom processor, which makes them the first Netbooks. In addition to sporting an Atom processor, the 901 and 1000 use Solid-State Disks (SSDs), 1GB of DDR2 memory (or up to 2GB with the 1000/1000H models), and a battery life of nearly eight hours.

ASUS Blitz Extreme: Over the years of reviewing ASUS products we've seen a number of interesting motherboards but the one we have our hands on for review today is one of the most interesting we have ever seen. This motherboard is the ASUS Blitz Extreme and packed onto this ATX PCB is Intel's P35 Chipset with ICH9R Southbridge, dual-channel DDR3-1333 memory support, CrossFire support, "voltiminder" LEDs, load-line calibration, Stack Cool 2, SupremeFX II audio, LCD poster display, and the ASUS Fusion Block System.

Intel Takes Mobile CPU To The Extreme: Aside from introducing the Core 2 Duo E6550, E6750, and E6850 processors and the Core 2 Extreme QX6850 quad-core processor, Intel has today announced the first-ever Core 2 Extreme processor that is targeted for mobile laptops. This new mobile processor is dual-core, but next year Intel hopes to introduce quad-core processors for consumer notebooks that will be battery friendly.

Intel Core 2 Extreme QX6800: Today Intel has extended its quad-core family with the introduction of the Core 2 Quad Extreme QX6800. This quad-core desktop processor will set you back $1,200 USD but runs at 2.93GHz and has a total of 8MB of L2 cache. We are working on providing Linux coverage of the Intel Core 2 Extreme QX6800 shortly, but in the mean time you may be interested in our Intel Penryn and Nehalem information.

XFX GeForce 7600 / 7900: Among NVIDIA's many manufacturers to begin pumping out the new GeForce 7600 / 7900 parts today is XFX. XFX today is unveiling their new XFX GeForce 7900GTX 512MB DDR3 Extreme Edition (PV-T71F-YDP), XFX GeForce 7900GTX 512MB DDR3 (PV-T71F-YDF), XFX GeForce 7900GTX 512MB DDR3 Extreme Edition (PV-T71F-YDP), XFX GeForce 7900GTX 512MB DDR3 XXX Edition (PV-T71F-YDD), XFX GeForce 7900GTX 512MB DDR3 (PV-T71F-YDL), XFX GeForce 7900GT 256MB DDR3 (PV-T71G-UDL), XFX GeForce 7900GT 256MB DDR3 (PV-T71G-UDF), XFX GeForce 7900GT 256MB DDR3 Extreme Edition (PV-T71G-UDE), XFX GeForce 7900GT 256MB DDR3 XXX Edition (PV-T71G-UDD), and XFX GeForce 7900GT 256MB DDR3 Extreme Edition (PV-T71G-UDP).

ASUS Product Launch: ASUSTek has also extended their product selection this morning in the form of the new GeForce 7900GTX G71, as well as a few motherboards. The products launching include -- P5B Deluxe, M2N32-SLI Deluxe, N4L-VM DH, EN7900GTX, EN7600GT SILENT, EAX1300PRO SILENT.

Industry Reviews

ASUS RoG Maximus IV Extreme

hardwareheaven.com: Today we have one of the first high end P67 based boards on our test bench. With their Maximus IV Extreme ASUS hope to deliver a board which exceeds anything else on the market and we will be testing it in a selection of synthetic and real world tests to establish how good it is.

ASUS Maximus IV Extreme

techreaction.net: In this review, we?ve dug much deeper into the Maximus IV Extreme and exploited its full potential with single, dual, and triple SLI configurations. We?ve included a much more thorough testing regime to better gauge the real world performance potential in this platform, and drawn full conclusions to better help you with your buying decisions.

ASUS Maximus IV Extreme reviews are also available at: bigbruin.com.

ASUS Rampage Extreme

techgage.com: When the time came to design the Rampage Extreme, ASUS' R&D went right to town. The X48-based board proves to be the most feature-packed one we've ever come across, and also one of the most overclockable. Aside from the robust design, water-cooled Northbridge and LCD Poster, the board even includes overclocking controls right on the PCB.

ASUS Rampage Extreme reviews are also available at: techgage.com, ninjalane.com, and overclock3d.net.

ASUS Rampage Extreme X48

legitreviews.com: Asides from the simple act of operating as a motherboard, the ASUS Rampage Extreme looks like a work of art and could almost be a coffee table centerpiece. Factor in the incredible possibilitles available with TweakIt, the discrete audio X-Fi solution, and the massive overclocking potential, it's hard to not want the board.

ASUS Rampage Extreme X48 reviews are also available at: tweaktown.com.

ASUS Crosshair IV Extreme

overclock3d.net: Put the children to bed. This is an x-rated motherboard.

ASUS Crosshair IV Extreme reviews are also available at: pcper.com.

Asus Crosshair IV Extreme AMD 890FX

hothardware.com: One of the unfortunate consequences of AMD's inability to match Intel's performance at the ultra high-end of the CPU market over the past few years is that there's been a substantial decline in the number of high-end AMD motherboards. NewEgg presently stocks just two AMD motherboards in the $200-$300 price range compared to 36 Intel products.

ASRock X58 Extreme

futurelooks.com: With Core i7 being the hot platform of the moment, pricing makes budget platforms appealing as well as profitable. Thats an area ASRock has repeatedly found to be a great place to market since we cant all afford $250 plus motherboards to go with our Core i7 processors.

Additional ASUS Maximus IV Extreme reviews: ASRock P55 Extreme, GIGABYTE EX58-EXTREME, Gigabyte GA-EP45T-Extreme, and Gigabyte GA-EX58-Extreme.

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