Home / Component / CPU / Intel to kill P chipset in January

Intel to kill P chipset in January

Sources in the Swindon area are telling us that Intel's had enough of the ‘P' chipset for Sandy Bridge and will be canning it around January – just in time for the launch of Ivy Bridge.

The launch of the new ‘Z' chipset was a bit of a surprise. With the P67 working ‘fine, thank you very much' anyway, the market was uncertain as to the usefulness of a new chipset.

While Gigabyte made a lot of early noise about a strong move to ‘Z', it was Asrock that first delivered the goods – with something of a pre-launch. Product from MSI and Asus is now widely available and enthusiasts seem OK with the small price delta – because it brings some additional features.

So now that we know that Intel will no longer ‘P' after 2011, what can we expect in the chip-giant's line-up?

Well, it all seems pretty straightforward.

Entry level boards will continue to be known as ‘H', the ability to get a boost on graphics (and do some overclocking) stays with the ‘Z' chipset and – finally – the ‘X' range will continue to provide the high-end thrill seekers with something to spend £200 on.

Significance?  We're not sure really, but one thing is for certain. For the first time in a VERY long time, Intel in actively engaged in some ‘re-action' to AMD – rather than it always being the other way around.

First there was the push to include a major new feature like DX11 inside Ivy Bridge. Secondly, there was the move to create a co-operative bridge between Intel's integrated offering and any graphics card that's added in – sometimes with a boost of up to 30% (according to Intel). Lastly, Intel's sales and marketing gurus (driven by Paul Otellini) are considering a price move on 2600k, if need be, to counter the 8-core FX version of Bulldozer. Interesting times.

The last time AMD launched a serious performance part – Intel simply loaded an existing chip with a heap of fast cache and, effectively, kept the lead in the CPU Cold War Arms Race.

Preparing for action - Peter Sellers (Dr Strangelove) and Paul Otellini (Intel)

KitGuru says: We wonder how many more good ideas Intel might thing are worth a look at?

Comments below or in the KitGuru forum.

Become a Patron!

Check Also

Intel Arrow Lake Refresh has been benchmarked in Geekbench

New data from Geekbench has surfaced for Intel's unannounced "Arrow Lake Refresh", branding the upcoming performance bump as the "Plus" series. While these chips weren't mentioned during Intel's CES 2026 keynote, the new leaks suggest that both desktop (LGA-1851) and mobile (HX) refreshes are right around the corner...