<%BANNER[top_768x90]%>
<%BANNER[banner_468x60_h]%>
<%BANNER[article]%>

News

Yesterday VIA Technologies announced its KT400A chipset and today this Taiwanese web-site disclosed the prices VIA charges for its latest Socket A the core-logic sets. As we supposed, VIA’s KT400A is a bit cheaper compared to NVIDIA’s nForce2 and its prospects on the market are more or less clear now.

According to the report, VIA KT400+VT8235CE configuration costs $18. In comparison, NVIDIA asks $20 and $30 for its nForce2 SPP and nForce2 IGP core-logic with a basic I/O controller respectively. The difference between the prices of discrete chipsets is not so big, however, we should also consider the fact that nForce2 powered mainboards are more complex compared to VIA KT400/KT400A because of dual-channel memory configuration that probably require mainboard makers to pay more attention on the quality. As a result, the difference between the price of KT400A and nForce2 powered solutions can be from $2 to $6. It is not too much if we deal with one or two mainboards, but if we multiply $6 on 10 000 mainboards, that will be a lot of money, I believe. On the other hand, NVIDIA’s nForce2 offers us greater performance and functionality, then, why not pay some additional sum for those advantages?

VIA continues to remain one of the biggest suppliers of Socket A chipsets. Reportedly the company has been selling 1.8 million of chipsets monthly for the past few months.

VIA Technologies currently supplies KT266A, KT333 CF, KT400 and KT400A discrete core-logic products for the Socket A platforms. It is very likely that either KT400 or KT333 CF will be phased out shortly, as presently KT400A is priced at the same level as KT400.

<%BANNER[banner_468x60_f]%>

Discussion

Comments currently: 0

You must log in to add comments.

Forgot password? Registration

remember me



Latest News

Friday, November 21, 2008

2:29 pm | IN BRIEF: Qimonda Accuses Seagate, LSI of Patent Infringement. Qimonda Asks ITC to Investigate Alleged Patent Infringements by LSI, Seagate

6:05 am | Sales of Blu-Ray Disc Players Below Expectations, Movie Prices Should Get Cheaper – Sony. Sony Admits: High BD Movie Prices Curtail Sales of Blu-Ray Players

4:12 am | AMD to Release Quad-Core Processor for Notebooks in 2010. AMD’s “Champlain” CPU Set to Emerge in 2010

Thursday, November 20, 2008

3:21 pm | Foxconn Rumoured to Take Over Pegatron, Quit Channel Business. Foxconn May Sacrifice Channel Business for Contract Manufacturing Capacity Expansion

1:43 pm | Intel Plans to Release Discrete Larrabee Graphics Processors in 2009 or 2010. Intel Unsure When to Release Its Standalone Larrabee Graphics Chip

12:09 pm | S3 Graphics Reveals New-Generation Graphics Processor. S3 Unveils GPU with Built-In Audio Core, Starts to Sell Chrome 530 GT Graphics Card

8:29 am | Blu-Ray Disc Players’ Prices Fall Below $150. Relatively Inexpensive Blu-Ray Players Finally Emerge

4:24 am | JEDEC to Set Solid State Drive Standards in 2009. JEDEC Plans to Standardize SSDs Next Year

3:00 am | Elpida May Gain Manufacturing Capacity or May Slowdown Its Further Expansion. Elpida May Plan Surprising Acquisition of Powerchip or ProMOS