Intel just announced that it has identified a bug in the 6-series chipset, specifically in its SATA controller. Intel states that "In some cases, the Serial-ATA (SATA) ports within the chipsets may degrade over time, potentially impacting the performance or functionality of SATA-linked devices such as hard disk drives and DVD-drives.". I don't know the specifics of the bug yet, but Intel very rarely issues statements like this so it's likely quite serious.
The fix requires new hardware, which means you will have to exchange your motherboard for a new one. Intel hasn't posted any instructions on how the recall will be handled other than to contact Intel via its support page or contact the manufacturer of your hardware directly. In speaking with motherboard manufacturers it seems they are as surprised by this as I am.
Intel will begin shipping the fixed version of the chipset in late February. The recall will reduce Intel's revenue by around $300 million and cost around $700 million to completely repair and replace affected systems.
Read on for more information on the nature of the bug and what it means for current and future SNB owners.
]]>Artikel Terkait:
- Zalman Cpu Water Cooling System Reserator 1 V2 Intel P4 Amd Sempron Amd64 (Personal Computers)
- Intel Sells Some of Its IMFT Stake to Micron
- Intel Core i3-2125, 2x 3.30GHz 3.3 2 LGA 1155 Processor (BX80623I32125) (Personal Computers)
- Intel Releases Core i7-3820
- Intel SSD 520 Review: Cherryville Brings Reliability to SandForce
- Intel Updates Sandy Bridge Graphics Drivers
- A Look at Enterprise Performance of Intel SSDs
- Intel Releases Seven Sandy Bridge CPUs
- Intel Announces Performance Tuning Protection Plan: Overclockers Get Some Intel Love
- Intel Smartphone at CES 2012 with Android OS
- Intel Confirms Working DX11 on Ivy Bridge
- Intel Announces its First Medfield Smartphone Partner at CES 2012 - Lenovo K800
- Intel Announces its Second Smartphone Platform Partner - Motorola
- Intel Shows off Thunderbolt, AppUp on Ivy Bridge Ultrabook Reference Design
- Intel New Processor Ivy Bridge will release in Q2 2012- New Series Processor
- Intel Pentium 4 640 SL7Z8 3.2Ghz/2M/800 LGA 775 CPU (Personal Computers)
- ASUS Maximus IV Extreme -Z - LGA 1155 - Z68 - Republic of Gamer Series - ATX Intel Z68 ATX DDR3 2200 Motherboards (Personal Computers)
- Review: Intel Core i7 2700K
- OCZ ZS Series 750W 80PLUS Bronze High Performance Power Supply compatible with Intel Sandy Bridge Core i3 i5 i7 and AMD Phenom (Personal Computers)
- Intel Core i5-2400 3.10 GHz 6 MB Cache Socket LGA1155 Processor (Personal Computers)
- Intel DX79SI Review: The Default X79?
- Intel to Add TRIM Support for RAID 0
- 2GB kit (1GBx2) Upgrade for a Apple iMac 1.83GHz Intel Core Duo (17-inch) System (DDR2 PC2-5300, NON-ECC, )
- Apple iMac ALL-IN-ONE Desktop - 3.06GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 8GBb RAM, 1TB HDD, NVIDIA 9400M, 8x SuperDrive, Wi-Fi, 21.5-inch, Mac OS X v10.6 Snow Leopard
- Intel Focuses on Tablets, Winds Down Digital Home Group
0 comments:
Post a Comment