
mark4man
MoonMix Studios
People,
Perusing my latest edition of PC Magazine (August), I came across an article entitled: "A New Era For Desktops." The article discusses the new Intel 64-Bit ready Chipset releases (915 & 925); and the various innovative technological improvements associated with the new bus, storage, memory & graphics architectures.
One of the biggest improvements is the development of PCI Express, which is the new high-speed serial bus connection...w/ a wire-pair transfer rate of 2 GBps (upstream & downstream); & a total bandwidth of 500 MBps (all this in comparison to the existing parallel connection PCI bus, w/ a universal total bandwidth of 133 MBps.)
Aside from the obvious improvements for PC recordists who grab one of these new machines, I was wondering:
1) Would existing PCI Cards from industry typical Audio Interfaces continue to work with this new architecture...would the existing Cards benefit from the improvements...or would we (& the industry) all be forced to upgrade?
2) Have any PC recording technical sources examined these new systems yet; & published findings (& if so...where are they)?
Thanks very much,
mark4man
Perusing my latest edition of PC Magazine (August), I came across an article entitled: "A New Era For Desktops." The article discusses the new Intel 64-Bit ready Chipset releases (915 & 925); and the various innovative technological improvements associated with the new bus, storage, memory & graphics architectures.
One of the biggest improvements is the development of PCI Express, which is the new high-speed serial bus connection...w/ a wire-pair transfer rate of 2 GBps (upstream & downstream); & a total bandwidth of 500 MBps (all this in comparison to the existing parallel connection PCI bus, w/ a universal total bandwidth of 133 MBps.)
Aside from the obvious improvements for PC recordists who grab one of these new machines, I was wondering:
1) Would existing PCI Cards from industry typical Audio Interfaces continue to work with this new architecture...would the existing Cards benefit from the improvements...or would we (& the industry) all be forced to upgrade?
2) Have any PC recording technical sources examined these new systems yet; & published findings (& if so...where are they)?
Thanks very much,
mark4man